The Ronald Karauri leaked videos scandal has Kenyans talking nonstop this week after private clips and photos surfaced online, allegedly showing the Kasarani MP in intimate moments with another man. The material hit Telegram channels hard, shared by an account known as @moh-e-ghai, who claimed straight out that Karauri is gay and posted the content as proof.
The leak dropped suddenly, with no warning. Screenshots and short videos spread from private groups to public feeds quickly, pulling reactions from shock to anger. @moh-e-ghai stayed bold in posts, calling it exposure of hidden truth, but many see revenge or blackmail as plain.
Karauri, flashy and outspoken in Parliament, built a name pushing youth issues and business. Now screens are filled with something personal nobody asked for.
Kenyans split sharply online. Some defend him fiercely, saying private life stays private – politician or not, consent matters. “This is pure violation,” one popular comment read, likes piling high. Others jump on the claim, sharing old clips or digging in the past for “signs”.
Hashtags mix support with gossip, with threads stretching long on X and Facebook. One viral post asked, “Why destroy a man like this?” Politics or hate?”
Karauri has kept quiet so far; there has been no statement from him or the team. His pages stay normal – work updates, constituency visits – like nothing happened. But silence lets noise grow louder.
The leaker @moh-e-ghai claims personal beef, hinting bad fallout turned ugly. Coincidence or targeted hit? Netizens debate endlessly, some calling for account bans, others sharing more to “expose”.
This hits different in Kenya, where LGBTQ talks stay heated. Leak drags Karauri into that fire unwillingly, whether true or twisted. Supporters say judge work, not bedroom. Critics use it to attack character quickly.
Online, women especially speak up on privacy. “If roles were reversed, we’d call it abuse,” one thread pointed out, pulling agreement wide.
Youth admire Karauri’s rise – self-made, bold suits, straight talk. Now many feel let down or protective at the same time. Gossip pages run wild, but serious voices call for calm – wait for facts, and respect boundaries.
Parliament watches quietly. Karauri has been absent from some sessions lately, fuelling speculation. Family stays out of sight, no comments.
Leak reminds us harshly how phones capture everything these days. One grudge, one share, reputation crumbles overnight. Kenyans debate consent loudly now, laws needing teeth, platforms accountable. Telegram stays a haven for such drops, hard to police.
This scandal tests that. Will it fade or stick? Time tells, but conversation shifted. Privacy hangs fragile; trust even more. Kenya awaits his word, hoping truth clears the air. For now, feeds stay busy, divisions clear.





















