Political goodwill needed to end illicit brews
Editorial
By
Editorial
| May 05, 2026
Illegal Chang'aa brewing on the river banks of Mathare Valley, Nairobi County. [File, Standard]
The menace of illicit brews in the Central Kenya region refuses to go away despite efforts to end it. At the centre of all this is the matter of a lack of political goodwill to end the problem.
A handful of unscrupulous businessmen cannot outwit the full government machinery to continue trading in death with such impunity. The numbers alone indict the State. Kenya loses Sh120 billion in tax revenue annually to illicit alcohol, with such products now commanding 60 per cent of the total market.
That figure represents schools not built, under-equipped hospitals and unpaved roads. Every shilling lost to a backyard distiller is a shilling stolen from the public. Families are being hollowed out. Men are being reduced to vegetables by drinks laced with industrial methanol, formalin or pesticides.
Communities are losing the male population not to migration or war, but to a bottle of poison sold cheaply at an unlicensed den. Blindness, liver failure, and sudden death have become weekly occurrences. Children grow up fatherless. Wives become widows and entire villages age without young men.
READ MORE
Gulf Energy at the centre of yet another 'dirty fuel' drama
Dangote eyes Kenya as hub to raise African capital for refinery, other projects
Treasury trims economic growth forecast to 5pc on Middle East conflict
Port players protest levy on nuclear screening
State targets 192,259 new housing units despite unmet promises
What revival of Voi-Taveta railway line means for local, regional trade
Nairobi joins global cities call for new shift to renewable energy
Housing: Interior design now drives lifestyle and wellness
Former Deputy President Rigathi Gachagua understood the urgency. His crackdown yielded measurable progress in the region. Those gains have since evaporated, swallowed by the inertia of those who replaced resolve with rhetoric.
What is now required is action, not the formation of more committees. The Alcoholic Beverages Association of Kenya has laid out a blueprint, which includes mandatory KRA excise stamps, a national digital traceability system, a multi-agency enforcement body, and sustained crackdowns at border points. These are common-sense interventions.
Both national and county governments must stop treating this as a political football. Licensing, enforcement, and prosecution must work in concert. Leaders from the affected regions, especially, must stop protecting the barons who bankroll their campaigns while poisoning their constituents.