A fresh political storm has erupted at the Senate after Narok Senator Ledama Ole Kina launched a sharp attack on the Kisii County leadership during a heated session, prompting renewed public debate over whether some lawmakers use oversight platforms to apply pressure on county procurement decisions.
Our reporting indicates that the confrontation is tied to Kisii’s ECDE milk programme and the control of supply contracts linked to it. Multiple independent sources familiar with the matter say the senator had been pushing for Kisii to award the milk supply arrangement to a private supplier associated with him, but the county leadership declined and maintained its preference for KCC, a state-linked institution, as part of a procurement posture aimed at keeping the programme within a formally defensible process.
Sources briefed on Kisii’s position say the Arati administration has taken a hard line that county programmes will be run through documented procurement channels and that suppliers will be selected through process rather than influence, even when pressure comes from senior national figures operating on high-visibility platforms. That refusal to shift course is now being cited as the context for the unusually forceful Senate attack, which several observers have described as going beyond normal accountability scrutiny.
As the Senate confrontation gained momentum, an additional piece of evidence began circulating that has intensified public questions around county school milk tenders.
Photos show cartons branded “Machakos County Government School Milk” clearly marked “NOT FOR SALE,” and the label includes processing and packing details pointing to Narok County and Ole Kina’s company.
The packaging has been cited in public discussion as an example of how politically sensitive county programmes can develop supplier linkages that, when disputed, quickly spill into political confrontation.





