“The Counsel Who Saw the Fire Coming: The Story of Wakili Philip Omolo Wuod Suna”

By Billy Mijungu

On the morning of June 27 2024 Kenya woke up to a thunderous piece of prose a piercing essay both intellectual and intimate that laid bare the soul of a generation in revolt. It was not authored by a career politician or a celebrated technocrat but by Wakili Philip Omolo a measured man from Suna Migori known more in judicial circles than in protest arenas.

The title alone stung like a cautionary hymn “I Took Time to Reflect For Intellectuals Only
It wasn’t just a think piece. It was a forensic postmortem of Kenya’s decades long betrayal of its youth a generation born into promise raised in stagnation and now marching in rage. Omolo a seasoned legal mind traced the rot back to the origins of the Republic not in whispers but in names. Mboya Obama Snr Kibaki Vision 2030. Then the derailments the Kroll Report the Goldenberg abyss the betrayal of ERS the corruption of Big Four the erasure of Konza the hollowing of LAPSSET the silencing of dreams.

Omolo’s analysis wasn’t theoretical. It was surgical. With each paragraph he placed Kenya’s elite class under a moral X ray. He accused them not just of failure but of betrayal of abandoning a brilliant roadmap to economic transformation and instead choosing “funny thingsmere schemes for plunder.” He condemned them for erecting steel monuments of concrete but demolishing dreams made in classrooms.
He asked “Where did we go wrong” Then he answered with unflinching clarity we killed Vision 2030 and with it the future of Gen Z.

But what truly gripped the nation was not just his critique. It was the grief.
Omolo painted the emotional landscape of a country suffocating in its own potential. He spoke of homes bulldozed by the same government that licensed their construction. Of parents who fed and clothed their children with hawker’s change only to watch them graduate into hopelessness. He captured with aching precision the collective trauma of watching entire generations climb the academic ladder only to find the roof missing.

He did not spare the clergy nor the courts nor the ‘washwash’ politicians flaunting ill gotten wealth like perfume in a starving room. “The Church went to bed with the State” he lamented. “The Youth were told they can go to hell with their knowledge”

Yet Wakili Omolo did not end in despair. He offered a roadmap sober structured urgent. He called for a renaissance a return to deliberate industrialization state restructuring jobs twenty million jobs in ten years or bust. Not utopia. Just dignity.
And then came his final warning as chilling as it was prophetic

“History teaches us that when a few elites veto modest demands by the masses… the only solution is to turn to threats of violent death. And that’s how revolutions come.”
He did not incite. He foresaw.

The streets of Nairobi Kisumu Mombasa and Nakuru are already rumbling with the feet of the disillusioned. Black flags wave. Chants rise. Tear gas descends like cursed rain. And somewhere in the heart of all that smoke and song is the voice of Wakili Philip Omolo steady painful necessary.
He is no anarchist. He is a mirror. And if Kenya is brave enough to look it might just see the beginning of a reckoning.
Or a revolution.

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