By Kelvin Otieno
In the soft morning light at Embakasi’s AP and GSU campuses, the sound of water gushing from new boreholes felt like a promise fulfilled. That promise was made by Ushiriki Wema Foundation—but it was powered by Regner Fu Capital Group, a private sector partner proving that corporate citizenship can be far more than a logo on a banner.
During the commissioning ceremony, H.E. Madame Tessie Musalia, MBS, emphasized that the initiative was not just about infrastructure—it was about respect, dignity, and legacy. The boreholes are part of Kuzingatia Mazingira Yetu, a reforestation and greening campaign anchored on President William Ruto’s tree-planting agenda.
But even more visionary is RFCG’s decision to scale the partnership through the deployment of solar energy solutions across all police training colleges. This will cut costs, reduce carbon footprints, and ensure clean power access—demonstrating that green investments can go hand-in-hand with security and governance.
The water may serve the trees. The solar may serve the campuses. But the greatest service is to the national spirit: that through collaboration, Kenya can grow greener, stronger, and more united.