NAIROBI, Kenya — In the aftermath of the Marion Naipei scandal, an incident that reignited national debate over digital exploitation, consent, and public morality; another quieter controversy has emerged. This time, it is not about the victim or the perpetrators, but about who gets to speak, when, and how often.
Nairobi County Chief Officer for Citizen Engagement and Customer Service, Geoffrey Mosiria was among government officials who publicly condemned the viral exploitation of Naipei. But instead of universal approval, his intervention triggered a wave of online hostility.
Critics questioned why he appeared to be “everywhere,” accusing him of grandstanding, overexposure, or opportunism disguised in Public Relations (PR) stunts.
The backlash forced Mosiria into an unusual position for a technocratic public servant: defending not a policy, but his presence itself.
“FOR THOSE ASKING WHY MOSIRIA IS EVERYWHERE-PLEASE ALLOW ME TO CLARIFY
First, public relations and communication are a core part of my work in the new department of Public Participation, Citizen Engagement, and Customer Service. Keeping the public informed is not optional; it is part of the job.
Secondly, all complaints from the public land on my desk. It is my responsibility to follow up, engage the relevant departments, and ensure that action is taken.
Being visible, accessible, and responsive is not about seeking attention it is about accountability, service, and results. This is the mandate I was given, and I will continue to execute it diligently.”
His response exposes a deeper fault line in Kenyan public life: a society that demands accountability, yet recoils when it is delivered visibly.
From environment to engagement: Mosiria’s expanding mandate
Mosiria’s prominence did not emerge by accident. He previously served in Nairobi County’s Environment docket, where he gained public recognition for hands-on enforcement, clean-up operations, and responsiveness to citizen complaints; often in real time, and often documented online.
His transfer to the newly empowered department of Public Participation, Citizen Engagement, and Customer Service significantly broadened his mandate.
The role places him at the intersection of citizen complaints, inter-departmental coordination, crisis response, and public communication.

In practical terms, this means that when scandals erupt, infrastructure fails, or citizens demand action, Mosiria is structurally positioned to respond—and to be seen responding.
In an era where governance increasingly unfolds in public digital spaces, visibility is no longer optional. It is built into the architecture of modern public service.
The politics of “too much presence”
Yet Mosiria’s case reveals a paradox. Kenyan politics has long been criticised for absent leaders, silent technocrats, and officials who surface only during crises or elections. But when a public officer becomes consistently visible; commenting, clarifying, condemning, and explaining—the reaction turns hostile.
The charge of being “everywhere” is not merely about frequency. It is about discomfort with redistributed power. Visibility erodes the distance between the state and the citizen.
It invites scrutiny. It also disrupts the familiar hierarchy where authority acts quietly and answers rarely.
Mosiria’s critics are not accusing him of misconduct. They are accusing him of presence.
Social media, moral outrage and selective expectations
The Marion Naipei scandal created a moral flashpoint. Public anger was intense, emotional, and often chaotic. In such moments, society looks for voices of authority, but only certain voices, and only on unspoken terms.
When Mosiria spoke, some interpreted his intervention as intrusion. Others framed it as opportunism. But few engaged with the substance of his mandate or the logic of his position.

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This reflects a broader trend in Kenya’s digital culture: public officials are expected to act, but not to speak too loudly about acting.
Accountability is desired in theory, but resented in practice, especially when it arrives with receipts, timelines, and public follow-ups.
Accountability is noisy by nature
Mosiria’s defence is ultimately a statement about how governance is changing.
Public participation, by design, is visible. Citizen engagement is conversational. Customer service is responsive. These functions cannot operate in silence without betraying their purpose.
The discomfort his visibility generates may say less about Mosiria and more about a society still adjusting to open, performative accountability; where action is documented, explained, and debated in real time.

Whether Kenyans embrace this model or retreat to familiar opacity will shape the future of county governance far beyond this moment.
For now, Geoffrey Mosiria has made his position clear: being everywhere is not ambition—it is assignment.






