Morara Kebaso offers to refund Kenyans who feel conned for supporting him

Said that he would not like to risk hurting his reputation by being called a conman or beggar.

In Summary
  • He asked anyone who needed a refund to send the original message they received after they sent contributions to him.
  • Morara appreciated all the support Kenyans have given him over the past few months but said the time has come for him to stop.
Activist Morara Kebaso.
Activist Morara Kebaso.
Image: HANDOUT

Political activist Morara Kebaso has now offered to refund anyone who supported him by sending money but feels conned.

In a statement on Saturday, Morara said that he would not like to risk hurting his reputation by being called a conman or beggar.

He asked anyone who needed a refund to send the original message they received after they sent contributions to him.

“I cannot continue to dirtify my reputation and earn the tag of a conman or beggar. It's not worth it. I have a company to run and a family that loves me. For this reason, I would like to refund any Kenyan that has supported me and felt conned. Please comment below with the M-Pesa message. I will check if it's real, refund you in full with a top-up for withdrawal then I will copy paste my refund message below your comment.

Nataka tumalizane kwa uzuri niende nipumzike. Kindly avoid faking any message because I have all messages from the day I started. The M-Pesa number has always been 0708985611 so this will not be hard to do,” Morara said.

He further stated that it looks like Kenyans have already made up their mind on the kind of country they want to have.

Morara appreciated all the support Kenyans have given him over the past few months but said the time has come for him to stop.

“I am grateful for all the support Kenyans have given me. But a time comes when a man must decide whether the nation is worth fighting for. My observation is that most Kenyans have already decided the country they want to live in.”

This comes after past videos of him accompanying President William Ruto for development tours in Kisii surfaced.

Critics questioned who he was really serving, despite saying that he was working for the people of Kenya.

Morara had earlier asked Kenyans to help him fundraise to buy a car and have a good public address system attached to it to help with his civic education activities as he engaged Kenyans across the country.

He would later ask for more to set up an office space where he would run his operations.

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