President Ruto and Muhoho Kenyatta ‘shake hands’ at state house….Photo/Courtesy
NAIROBI, Kenya (IP)
President William Ruto’s mid-week encounter with Muhoho Kenyatta was brief, polite and outwardly harmless — the kind of interaction that in most countries would pass unnoticed.
In Kenya, it detonated like a firecracker in a quiet library.
Muhoho, the younger brother of former President Uhuru Kenyatta and a man better known for boardrooms than ballot papers, found himself momentarily back in the political spotlight after President Ruto publicly acknowledged him at State House during a youth awards ceremony.
Ruto, smiling and relaxed, referred to Muhoho as “my friend,” a phrase that instantly sent social media into forensic mode.
Kenyans began debating tone, body language, facial expressions and — most critically — whether the handshake lasted longer than two seconds.
The meeting itself took place on neutral ground: a ceremony celebrating young achievers, leadership, discipline and service.
Politics, at least officially, was not on the program. Unofficially, it became the headline.
Muhoho attended in his capacity as a senior figure in the Duke of Edinburgh’s Award programme, a role that has little to do with elections but plenty to do with symbolism — something Kenyan politics never ignores.
There were no speeches about unity. No declarations of reconciliation. No mention of past rivalries and yet, the mere sight of a Kenyatta inside State House under Ruto’s watch was enough to revive theories ranging from “national healing” to “next-level chess.”
Political observers noted that Ruto, a master of political theatre, chose not to overplay the moment.
He did not linger. He did not explain. He simply acknowledged, smiled and moved on — leaving the country to do the heavy lifting of interpretation.
Muhoho, for his part, maintained the composure of a man who knows that saying nothing often says the most.
He neither endorsed nor denounced, neither waved nor winked. He attended, existed and exited.
Behind the humour lies a familiar Kenyan reality: symbols matter. A handshake can trend.
A smile can offend. Silence can be interpreted as strategy.
As the 2027 elections hover in the distance, every public interaction is now viewed through a political microscope.
Allies are suspected. Neutrals are questioned and families with famous surnames are never just families.
For now, the Ruto-Muhoho moment remains officially what it appeared to be — a courteous exchange at a youth event.
Unofficially, it has become a national Rorschach test, revealing far more about Kenya’s political anxieties than about the two men themselves.
Key Pointers (Read With a Smile):
-
A handshake happened. Kenya reacted accordingly.
-
No alliance was announced, but several were invented online.
-
Youth empowerment was the agenda; political speculation stole the show.
-
Silence did most of the talking.
-
In Kenyan politics, nothing is ever “just an event.”
As ever, the country waits for the next photograph.



