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Kenya’s Social Health Insurance: The Grand Theft Disguised As Healthcare Reform

Ladies and gentlemen, welcome to Kenya’s latest season of “How to Rob a Nation in Broad Daylight,” starring none other than the government itself, assisted by a shadowy cast of private individuals who now own and control a healthcare system meant for the people.

Yes, in case you were wondering, you are not hallucinating—the KES 104 billion Social Health Insurance (SHA) system, which should have been under government control, has instead been handed over to a private consortium. And for added entertainment, the government is legally forbidden from creating a competing system. That’s right—this is not just a heist; it’s a monopoly wrapped in a legislative straightjacket.

For those keeping count, this means that the health records of millions of Kenyans are now at the mercy of an exclusive club of private individuals whose names you will never know but whose pockets will grow heavier each time you contribute to SHA. And lest you think the government might, at some point, regain control, think again. The consortium owns not just the system but every single component of it, including the intellectual property. The only thing the government gets is the physical infrastructure—fancy buildings with no brains. It’s like buying a car but being told you don’t own the engine, the wheels, or the keys.

Now, who are these generous souls who have been gifted such a lucrative deal? The Auditor General’s report conveniently points fingers at Adani Holdings, an Indian firm with deep pockets and a reputation for being at the right place at the right time when billion-dollar deals are up for grabs. With private individuals expected to rake in KES 11 billion annually, SHA has officially transformed from a social health program into an elite cash cow, and the government is merely its bewildered herder.

Read Also: Kenyans Searched SHA On Google The Most In 2024

The system is so well designed to siphon off funds that it comes with a built-in tax disguised as “service charges.” The consortium will collect 2.5% from every contribution by members, skim off 5% from claims made by health facilities, and even snatch 1.5% for track and trace services. Essentially, every Kenyan who falls sick will not just be paying for treatment but also ensuring that a select few individuals can afford to holiday in the Maldives, all thanks to a “public” health insurance system.

If you were hoping for some accountability in this grand scheme, prepare for disappointment. An escrow agent—appointed by both the government and the consortium—is set to collect a staggering KES 111 billion over the next 10 years. Who exactly this agent is, and what oversight mechanisms are in place, remains a mystery wrapped in a riddle inside a government vault labeled “None of Your Business.”

The most laughable, or rather, tear-inducing part of this entire arrangement is the clause that explicitly forbids the government from developing any alternative system that might offer competition. This is not just corruption; it’s premeditated economic subjugation. Kenyan citizens are now permanently chained to this private entity for their healthcare needs, much like a cow that must return to the same trough for water, even if the owner decides to charge per sip.

Where was Parliament when this deal was being signed? Where was the Ministry of Health? Did they blink, nod, or simply cash in? It takes an extraordinary level of either incompetence or collusion to allow such a national betrayal to pass as policy. The same government that claims it lacks funds for critical healthcare infrastructure somehow found it prudent to lock taxpayers into a multi-decade dependency on private profiteers.

This is no longer just a policy failure—it’s state-sponsored economic violence. Millions of Kenyans will now be forced to contribute to a system where their own government has no control. The private consortium, like a puppeteer, will dictate costs, claim approvals, and even system access. And when hospitals struggle with delayed payments or claim denials, who will be held accountable? Certainly not the faceless private individuals who own SHA.

If you are looking for a modern example of how to legally privatize public suffering, look no further. This is not health insurance—it is an extortion racket with government blessings. And for the cherry on top, when things inevitably collapse, the same government will feign shock, promising investigations and task forces that will produce nothing but dust and frustration.

Kenya has officially transitioned from being a corrupt state to being a captured one. The lines between government policy and private profiteering have been so masterfully blurred that one wonders whether public offices now exist solely to funnel wealth upwards. This is not just about healthcare—it’s a microcosm of a larger problem where national resources and services are increasingly designed to benefit a privileged few at the expense of the suffering many.

In the coming days, expect government spokespeople to give their usual tired excuses. They will tell you that SHA is for “efficiency” and “improved service delivery.” They will claim that private-sector involvement was necessary. They will even accuse critics of being “anti-development.” But do not be fooled—this is a scam, engineered with precision and executed with a level of arrogance that suggests they are sure Kenyans will do nothing about it.

The question is: will we? Or will we simply sigh, shake our heads, and go back to hoping that someday, somehow, our leaders will develop a conscience? If history is any guide, waiting for integrity in this government is as futile as expecting rain in the Sahara.

Kenyans, the SHA scam is not just theft—it’s the selling of your right to healthcare. If this does not anger you, then nothing ever will.

Read Also: SHA Patients To Lose Access To Private Hospitals Including Teachers And Police

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