Clown World Defeated: Kenyan Court Drags Corrupt Minister for Secretly Building US Ebola Bio-Camp
Health Minister Aden Duale forced to bend the knee and halt the Laikipia project after getting hit with a contempt charge for ignoring judges.

In an absolute masterclass of globalist plans running face-first into a wall of reality, Kenya's High Court just slapped down a secret government deal to build a US-managed Ebola quarantine camp at the Laikipia air base in Nanyuki. Health Minister Aden Duale had to crawl back to court on Tuesday, offering a massive apology and ordering an immediate halt to all construction. This came after the judge held him in contempt for trying to quietly slide the project through despite a court ban. It turns out you can't just ignore the law to please your foreign donors.
The entire setup is a classic example of elite gaslighting. The US government wanted to build a 50-bed bio-isolation camp on Kenyan soil to treat Americans evacuated from the Democratic Republic of Congo—which is currently dealing with over 1,000 Ebola cases and 250 deaths. But instead of quarantine-ing their citizens back home in America, the US decided to outsource the bio-hazard risk to Kenya, a country that has literally never had a single case of Ebola. You really can't make this stuff up.
When the public found out about this backroom deal, they were furious. Rights groups immediately sued, pointing out the obvious: the government set the whole thing up in complete secrecy without asking a single local resident. The union doctors weren't buying the spin either. Dr. Davji Atellah of the Kenya Medical Practitioners, Pharmacists and Dentists Union summed it up perfectly: "If it is too dangerous for America, it is too dangerous for Kenya." Common sense, right? Not for the politicians.
But instead of listening to the people, the Kenyan government chose violence. Militarized riot police were deployed to Nanyuki to crush the protests, leading to three demonstrators getting killed—including one shot dead on June 9. The political class was apparently more than willing to let local blood spill in order to keep their foreign military partners happy. It is a grim reminder of whose interests these politicians actually serve when push comes to shove.
To make matters even more ridiculous, the government treated the court's initial May injunction like a polite suggestion. Satellite images from June 22 showed that the US military and Kenyan officials were actively building out tents and paving areas anyway. Diplomats confirmed that specialist equipment and personnel were still flying into the base on the low. They really thought they could just build it anyway and ignore the legal system entirely.
But the courts weren't having it. Judge Patricia Nyaundi Mande called their bluff, holding Duale in contempt on Monday and threatening him with actual sentencing. Faced with real consequences, Duale folded immediately. He stood in court on Tuesday, apologized, and signed the order to shut it all down. He still tried to claim that the public's fears of Ebola spreading were "scientifically unfounded," but nobody is buying the official narrative anymore.


