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Parliament Proposes to Give DCI KES 150 Million to Track Social Media Users

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June 12, 2025
Parliament Proposes to Give DCI KES 150 Million to Track Social Media Users
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The National Assembly Budget and Appropriations Committee led by Alego-Usonga MP Samuel Atandi has dropped a bombshell in its latest budget recommendations: KES 150 million specifically allocated to purchase and operate the Optimus 3.0 system, designed to monitor social media users across the country.

This allocation sits within a larger KES 2.54 trillion national budget that has seen dramatic internal reshuffling of priorities.

The Directorate of Criminal Investigations (DCI) stands to receive KES 50 million for procuring Optimus 3.0 equipment, with an additional KES 100 million earmarked for running what’s euphemistically termed the “DCI forensic lab OPTIMUS 3.0 Social Media” operation.

According to digital security experts, this system possesses the capability to identify social media users across multiple platforms, tracking not just what people post, but where they post it from and which devices they’re using, all traceable through connection metadata.

While the government frames this as a necessary tool for combating cyber threats, hate speech, and misinformation, the timing and scale of this investment certainly raises uncomfortable questions about the state’s relationship with its citizens’ digital freedoms.

To start off, the budget committee’s recommendations reveal a telling pattern of priorities. To fund various government operations, including this surveillance system, the National Fund for the Disabled of Kenya has been slashed by KES 400 million.

Education has taken brutal hits too: secondary education faces a net loss of KES 4 billion, while university education loses KES 920 million. Teacher capacity-building programs have also been cut by KES 620 million.

The implication here is the government believes monitoring citizens’ social media activities is more important than educating children or supporting disabled Kenyans.

Meanwhile, the executive office of the president has seen its budget grow to KES 5.37 billion, including funds to replace the “old fleet of motor vehicles for chief of staff and the head of public service.”

George Orwell’s dystopian vision in his famous novel 1984 featured telescreens that monitored citizens’ every move and thought. Today’s Kenya doesn’t need telescreens.

It has smartphones, social media platforms, and now, apparently, a KES 150 million surveillance system designed to watch what its people say, think, and share online.

The Optimus 3.0 system is a philosophical statement about the relationship between the Kenyan state and its citizens. In a country where freedom of expression has historically been hard-won, the government is now investing a lot of resources in monitoring that very expression.

Digital rights advocates have already warned that such systems, regardless of their stated purpose, create infrastructure for oppression. Today’s “anti-misinformation” tool becomes tomorrow’s weapon against political dissent.

The capability to track users across platforms, identify their devices, and monitor their digital footprints is the same whether you’re hunting terrorists or silencing critics.

Kenya now joins a growing list of nations investing heavily in digital surveillance infrastructure. But this investment comes with hidden costs that extend far beyond the KES 150 million price tag.

When citizens know they’re being watched, they self-censor. When people fear their social media activity might land them in trouble, they withdraw from public discourse. Ultimately, democracy withers in the shadow of surveillance.

The government’s justification – protecting national security and public order – echoes the rhetoric of authoritarian regimes worldwide. Every surveillance state in history has claimed its spying was for the people’s own good. After all, the road to hell authoritarianism is paved with good intentions.

What may be the most troubling aspect of this budget allocation isn’t just the surveillance system itself, but the apparent lack of oversight mechanisms.

Parliament will debate these recommendations, but the fundamental question remains: who will ensure this powerful surveillance tool isn’t abused?

Where mature democracy exists, such capabilities would come with stringent judicial oversight, transparent reporting requirements, and clear limitations on use.

Kenyans deserve to know not just that their government is watching, but precisely how, when, and under what circumstances.

Unless such safeguards can be put in place, it appears Big Brother has arrived, and the only thing Kenyans can do is watch their backs.

Source: contributed

 

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