PATRICK OSOI RALLIES F.B.I QUEENS IN BATTLE AGAINST BRUTALITY AND IMPUNITY
By: Glad Tv Kenya reporter
Patrick Osoi, the 2027 presidential aspirant and leader of the Fighting Brutality and Impunity (F.B.I) movement, has declared that Kenya must confront police brutality and systemic neglect head-on, as he welcomed the women-led F.B.I Queens into the national struggle for justice.
Speaking at Hill Park hotel in Nairobi at the unveiling of the Queens, Osoi said their courage represented the heartbeat of the nation. “It was an honor to welcome our F.B.I Queens to this wonderful yet tough journey of reclaiming justice for our people,” he said. “These mothers, sisters, and daughters are a reminder that our fight is not about politics, but about the value of life, the dignity of families, and the truth that can no longer be ignored.”
Osoi condemned what he called the normalization of violence against innocent youth. “Every time a child is shot, every time a family is left to mourn, and every time compensation is offered instead of justice, the state fails its people,” he said. “No family should have to choose between silence and blood money. Justice must come before the bullet, not after it.”
He pledged to keep amplifying the voices of the women who, in his words, “refuse to bow to fear.” “The F.B.I Queens are not criminals, they are not terrorists, they are not enemies of the state,” Osoi said. “They are fearless in truth, bold in resistance, and independent from fear. They are the storm that injustice should fear.”
The Queens themselves, speaking with raw emotion, described the reality they live with. “We are not a militia. We are not terrorists. We are not criminals,” one said. “We are Fearless, bold, independent women, mothers, sisters, daughters and leaders standing against injustice and demanding accountability.”
Their testimonies laid bare a pattern of violence and neglect. “We will not stay silent while rogue police officers are given the power to kill our children in cold blood,” said a grieving mother. “We will not accept the normalization of unlawful orders to shoot, to disable, and to kill.”
They argued that the system treats life as a commodity, offering payouts to silence grieving families. “We say NO to a system that tries to put a price on our children’s lives offering compensation after the murder, instead of justice before the bullet,” one member declared.
The Queens also tied their struggle to the state of public health and the plight of Kenya’s youth. “We see our health systems brutalized where clinics are ignored, hospitals underfunded, and the poor left to die while the rich buy healing,” said a nurse among the group. “Our youth aged 17 to 22 are arrested, beaten, and labeled as ‘terrorists’ simply because they raised their voices and exercised their constitutional right to demonstrate.”
Another added: “These are not just statistics. These are our children. These are our stories. This is our reality.”
But justice, they argued, is priced out of reach for ordinary people. “We are drowning in court fines we cannot afford. Justice has a price tag, and only the rich can pay,” one lamented.
In a pointed message, the women called on faith leaders to stand with them. “To the leaders of the Church, the Mosque, and the Temple we call on you to rise,” one member said. “Where are your voices when our children are gunned down? Where is your outrage when the blood of the innocent runs through our streets? What does your silence teach us?”
Osoi urged religious institutions and civil society not to shy away. “Silence in the face of injustice is complicity,” he said. “We cannot allow the Church, the Mosque, or the Temple to become bystanders in the suffering of our people. We must stand together.”
The Queens closed their rally with a defiant reminder of their identity and mission. “We are not here to destroy. We are here to build, to heal, and to demand what is right,” one said. “We are not driven by hate we are driven by love for our children, our communities, and our future.”
For Osoi, their courage signals the birth of a new force in Kenya’s civic landscape. “The F.B.I Queens are proof that women are the conscience of this nation,” he said. “Their voices will shake this system, and together we will deliver a Kenya where justice is not for sale, where hospitals serve the people, and where our children can live without fear.”
The FBI Queens final words rang out like a battle cry: “We are F.B.I Queens. We are Fearless in truth. We are Bold in resistance. We are Independent from fear. And we will not stop.”

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