When A Government Loses Trust, Even Ebola Becomes A Political Question

There are moments when a country must stop whispering and speak with the full weight of its wounded conscience. The reported plan to host an Ebola quarantine facility in Kenya for Americans exposed to the virus is one of those moments. This is not just a health story. It is a sovereignty story. It is a trust story. It is a governance story. It is a question of whether the lives of ordinary Kenyans can be placed on the table of foreign convenience without public consent, parliamentary scrutiny, full disclosure, and hard constitutional safeguards.
Kenyans are not mad for asking questions. Kenyans are not being emotional for demanding answers. Kenyans are not being anti-American for refusing to be treated as a convenient holding ground for a deadly disease that another powerful country does not want to manage on its own soil. A serious republic must never apologize for defending its citizens. A responsible government must never make life-and-death decisions in the shadows and then expect the people to clap in silence.
The concern is simple and legitimate. If the United States is reportedly reluctant to bring Ebola-exposed citizens directly back home, why should Kenya be expected to carry that burden? If the roles were reversed, would America allow Kenyan citizens exposed to Ebola to be flown into a U.S. military facility for quarantine? Would Washington accept such an arrangement without a public fight, without congressional scrutiny, without legal challenges, without angry citizens asking who signed what, when, and for whose benefit? That is the standard Kenyans must use. Not emotions. Not propaganda. Standards.
This is where President William Ruto and his government have failed the country. The first duty of any president is not diplomacy. It is not pleasing foreign powers. It is not chasing international praise. The first duty of any president is the protection of the people. When a government appears comfortable negotiating arrangements that could expose citizens to a high-risk public health threat without total transparency, that government creates fear. It creates suspicion. It invites anger. It tells the people that their safety may be negotiable.
And because this government has already destroyed public trust through arrogance, secrecy, excessive policing, punitive taxation, broken promises, and open contempt for dissent, even a public health arrangement becomes political. That is the cost of governing without credibility. When citizens no longer trust their leaders, they do not only question policies. They question motives. They question timing. They question beneficiaries. They question whether the same state that has treated young Kenyans demanding accountability as enemies can be trusted with a crisis involving a deadly virus.
That is why the question many Kenyans are asking is painful but unavoidable: what safeguards exist to prevent this crisis from being mishandled, politicized, or used to intimidate citizens? This is not an accusation that Ebola is being weaponized. It is a demand for proof that the government has built enough legal, medical, ethical, and constitutional walls to ensure that no public health emergency can ever become a tool of political abuse, negligence, or state secrecy.
A government that respects its people would have addressed the nation openly. It would have tabled the agreement. It would have explained the science. It would have named the facility. It would have disclosed who approved it. It would have explained whether Parliament was involved. It would have stated whether county governments were consulted. It would have published the emergency protocols. It would have clarified who carries liability if anything goes wrong. It would have told Kenyans what happens if a quarantined person becomes symptomatic, if there is a breach, if health workers are exposed, or if local communities panic.
Instead, Kenyans have been forced to learn the details from foreign media, court filings, civil society interventions, and scattered official statements. That alone is an insult. No nation should discover from outsiders that its territory may be used for a high-risk medical operation involving a disease as feared as Ebola. If the Kenyan people are the ones who would bear the consequences of any failure, then the Kenyan people must be the first to know the truth.
Ebola is not a minor flu. It is a dangerous viral disease that demands extreme caution, specialized response systems, disciplined isolation protocols, trained personnel, reliable protective equipment, and absolute clarity. The issue is not whether public health cooperation is wrong. Countries can and should cooperate during outbreaks. The issue is whether Kenya has been treated as an equal partner or as a convenient offshore buffer for a richer country that does not want the political risk of managing its own exposed citizens at home.
The moral question is even sharper. Why should a Kenyan mother in Laikipia, Nairobi, Nakuru, Kisumu, Mombasa, Eldoret, Garissa, or Webuye be asked to trust an arrangement whose full terms she has not seen? Why should a Kenyan health worker be expected to accept exposure risks without knowing the compensation, insurance, training, and evacuation guarantees? Why should communities near such a facility be told to remain calm when the people in power have not respected them enough to explain the danger, the safeguards, and the chain of command?
Public health is built on trust. Trust is built on truth. Truth is built on disclosure. Once a government breaks that chain, even the best medical protocol becomes vulnerable to fear. And fear, in a country already exhausted by economic pain, political arrogance, and institutional decay, can become a national fire.
President Ruto must understand this clearly: Kenyans are not children. They are citizens. They are taxpayers. They are voters. They are the owners of this republic. They have the right to know whether their soil, their military facilities, their hospitals, their health workers, and their communities are being drawn into an international Ebola response arrangement. The government has no moral authority to ask for blind trust when it has repeatedly failed the basic test of honest communication.
The courts have now become the line of defense because the executive failed to lead transparently. When citizens and civil society must rush to court to stop or scrutinize a public health arrangement, it means the public participation process has collapsed. It means the government has not carried the people along. It means the constitutional spirit of accountability has been ignored. That is not how a republic should be governed.
This matter should never have reached the point of panic. It should have begun with Parliament. It should have begun with county leadership. It should have begun with the Kenya Medical Practitioners, Pharmacists and Dentists Union, public health experts, constitutional lawyers, civil society, and local communities. It should have begun with a national address backed by documents, not rumors. But secrecy always creates a vacuum, and in that vacuum, fear grows teeth.
Kenyans must reject the normalization of dangerous secrecy. Today it is an Ebola quarantine arrangement. Tomorrow it could be another foreign security deal. The next day it could be a debt commitment. Then a land concession. Then a data-sharing agreement. A country that allows the executive to make serious decisions without public accountability eventually becomes a country where citizens only learn the truth after the damage is done.
This is why young Kenyans demanding accountability, fairness, justice, and good governance are right to be alarmed. They have watched the state respond to criticism with hostility. They have watched public concern get dismissed as noise. They have watched loyalty rewarded over competence. They have watched public institutions weakened by political convenience. So when such a government is asked to manage a crisis involving Ebola, the fear is not only medical. It is political. It is institutional. It is moral.
A competent government would not fear scrutiny. A government acting in good faith would welcome questions. A government committed to protecting its citizens would publish the agreement, provide medical evidence, open itself to parliamentary oversight, and accept independent monitoring. Only a government that knows it has something to hide treats public questions as an inconvenience.
Kenya must cooperate with the world, yes. But cooperation must never mean surrender. Partnership must never mean becoming a dumping ground for risks others refuse to carry. Humanitarian responsibility must never be used to quietly transfer danger from the powerful to the vulnerable. Kenya can stand with the world during an outbreak without allowing its citizens to be exposed to unnecessary risk or political disrespect.
The demand is therefore clear. No Ebola-related quarantine, isolation, treatment, or transfer arrangement involving foreign citizens should proceed in Kenya without full disclosure of the agreement, parliamentary review, independent public health assessment, county consultation, community engagement, legal liability provisions, worker protection guarantees, emergency evacuation protocols, and real-time public communication. Anything less is not preparedness. It is recklessness.
President Ruto must be reminded that the Kenyan presidency is not a brokerage office for foreign interests. It is a constitutional office whose first loyalty is to the Kenyan people. The lives of Kenyans are not bargaining chips. Our health system is not an experimental holding bay. Our land is not a convenient quarantine zone for the politically powerful. Our people deserve dignity, safety, and truth.
And to those telling Kenyans to keep quiet, shame on you. A people who cannot question decisions that may affect their lives are no longer citizens; they are subjects. A nation that cannot demand transparency in the face of a deadly disease has surrendered its sovereignty. Kenya belongs to Kenyans first. Not to foreign governments. Not to secret deals. Not to political brokers. Not to leaders who remember the people only when they need votes.
This is bigger than Ebola. It is about whether Kenya still dares to defend itself. It is about whether leadership means protecting citizens or pleasing power. It is about whether the Constitution is a living shield or a decorative book quoted only when convenient. It is about whether the suffering, anger, and vigilance of young Kenyans will finally force this country to return to the basics of governance: truth, accountability, competence, and respect for human life.
In the end, Kenyans are not asking for miracles. They are asking for honesty. They are asking for safety. They are asking for proof. They are asking their president to remember the oath of office. If this government cannot be transparent on a matter involving Ebola, then it has no business asking the people to trust it with anything else. The country must not be forced to choose between foreign convenience and Kenyan lives. The answer must be clear: Kenya first, Kenyans first, public safety first, accountability always.
Source context used for factual grounding: Reuters reported that Kenya had approved a U.S. plan for a 50-bed quarantine facility at a Kenyan air force base for Americans exposed to Ebola, and later reported that Kenya’s High Court temporarily suspended the plan pending legal proceedings. AP and The Guardian reported on the wider DRC Ebola outbreak and WHO response. Citizen Digital reported the High Court order stopping the establishment or operationalisation of any Ebola exposure, quarantine, isolation, or treatment facility under the contested arrangement. This article is an opinion commentary grounded in those reported developments.
Read Also: Kenya Approves U.S Ebola Quarantine Facility In Laikipia Amid Regional Outbreak Fears
About Steve Biko Wafula
Steve Biko is the CEO OF Soko Directory and the founder of Hidalgo Group of Companies. Steve is currently developing his career in law, finance, entrepreneurship and digital consultancy; and has been implementing consultancy assignments for client organizations comprising of trainings besides capacity building in entrepreneurial matters.He can be reached on: +254 20 510 1124 or Email: info@sokodirectory.com
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