The conversation in Kenya right now is no longer just about bad fuel. It has quickly turned into a question of leadership, responsibility and trust. And at the centre of it all is Energy Cabinet Secretary James Opiyo Wandayi.
What started as concerns over questionable fuel imports has now snowballed into a full-blown scandal. Billions of shillings are involved, investigations are ongoing, and already, there have been arrests and resignations within the energy sector.
For many Kenyans, that alone raises a simple question, how does something this big happen under a sitting Cabinet Secretary?
A trust issue
Even before investigators conclude their work, public opinion is already shifting. People are not waiting for court rulings to form an opinion. They are looking at the bigger picture.
Fuel is not just another commodity. It touches everything. Transport costs, food prices, business operations, even the daily commute.
So when reports emerge that substandard fuel may have entered the system, it hits differently. It feels personal.
That is why many Kenyans are struggling to understand how the safeguards failed. And more importantly, who was supposed to ensure they did not fail.
Wandayi has said the government acted quickly and even stopped another shipment once concerns were raised. But for critics, that sounds more like damage control than prevention. The feeling is that action came after the problem had already slipped through.
Leadership on the spot
There is a growing view that this is bigger than technical errors or rogue officials. It is about leadership at the top.
In public office, especially at Cabinet level, responsibility does not always mean direct involvement. Sometimes it simply means things went wrong under your watch.
That is the argument now gaining ground. That regardless of how investigations turn out, the Energy CS cannot distance himself from what has happened.
Some leaders have already come out strongly, calling for his resignation. Others are pushing for more drastic action, including possible removal from office. The pressure is building, and it is becoming harder to ignore.
Why stepping aside matters
Stepping aside would not mean Wandayi is guilty. That is something investigators will determine.
But it would send a message. A message that accountability still matters. That when a crisis of this magnitude happens, someone at the top must take responsibility.
It would also clear the way for investigations to proceed without any suspicion of interference, whether real or perceived.
Right now, his continued stay in office risks becoming a distraction. Instead of focusing on fixing the problem, the public conversation keeps circling back to him.
A moment of truth
This scandal could easily become one of those moments Kenyans remember for years. Not just because of the fuel, but because of how leadership responded.
