Purity Mwambia Breaks 2-Year Twitter Silence, Clarifies Being Abandoned In US

The statement on Twitter on Saturday, June 3 was her first post on the social media platform since March 24, 2021

Purity Mwambia Breaks 2-Year Twitter Silence, Clarifies Being Abandoned In US
Journalist Purity Mwambia speaking during a media forum organised by the US State Department on Tuesday, May 30, 2023. /VIRALTEAKE

Citizen TV investigative journalist, Purity Mwambia addressed earlier reports of being abandoned while in exile in the United States (US) following her explosive Guns Galore exposé revealing how a section of police officers lent their weapons and uniforms to thugs.

The statement on Twitter on Saturday, June 3 was her first post on the social media platform since March 24, 2021, when she shared a screenshot of an article by CNN shared on Twitter about dolphins making a day trip to Venice in Italy, the rest being retweets.

Mwambia nonetheless clarified that she was still going about her media career and has been capitalising on support from Royal Media Services (RMS), her employer.

"On Tuesday, I made remarks at a State Department forum in Washington DC narrating my experiences with a human rights group; experiences very well known to that group.

Purity Mwambia (first on the left) during a conference organised by the United States Department of State on May 30, 2023. /TWITTER.SAMUEL BRESLOW

"Just note, I continue carrying my career cross proudly with the total support of my employer back home," she wrote.

Mwambia's statement is an assurance to all quarters regarding the status of her job, with reports of being abandoned emerging after she narrated her challenges having been in exile for two years in the US on Tuesday, May 30.

She appeared in the public eye for the first time, though at a conference organised by the US Department of State to discuss the unique challenges faced by women in the news industry.

The celebrated journalist was part of a panel discussion hosted by the Bureau of Global Public Affairs and among those sessions covered women living in exile because of their journalistic work.

Mwambia went into exile in the US in 2021 following the expose released on Sunday, April 18 of that year, which drew positive and negative reactions from all quarters including from former Director of Criminal Investigations (DCI) George Kinoti.

She recalled how life was tough for her in exile, admitting that she had to start afresh in the American country, meaning that her exposes as well as her achievements accomplished in Kenya were a thing of the past.

She further noted that getting the gist of the US media environment was difficult and that she only covered one story during the two years she was in the US.

“Thank you for this opportunity. My challenges are not very different from other investigative journalists in exile. First of all, when you come here from your country where you’ve done big stories, you’ve quoted all these people who are doing some corruption, big shots in the government...but believe me, when you come here, it’s like your voice is silenced.

“It’s hard to navigate the US media landscape, especially for global journalists. It’s so hard. I’ve been here for two years and I’ve only been able to do one story with one of the local companies," she stated.

She expressed how tough it was for immigrants in the quest to pursue the American dream, revealing her own experience of being abandoned by an organisation that facilitated her exile into America after fleeing Kenya upon receiving death threats.

"Some who come here say it is like the American dream but has its own challenges. You find yourself in a place where there is no one to talk to, no one to run to.

"Personally, I was brought here by an organisation and they abandoned me. They left me, I’m on the verge of homelessness because I don’t know what to do next," she lamented.

While staring at an uncertain future in America, Mwambia described her own experience of seeing homeless people besides the metro buses she passes by, one of the stories she would have loved to take up had she not believed that the same would happen to her.

“Every day when I walk past all these metro buses and I see these homeless people. It’s one of those stories I would have loved to tell as a journalist, but now I walk as if I’m literally in their shoes, not knowing what’s going to happen to me,” Mwambia added.

She however felt that America was more supportive by providing more than money to exiled journalists so that they could work freely and independently as they followed a story wherever it unfolded.

Mwambia also mentioned that they were given media spaces where they didn’t have to talk about their past experiences before they could settle down to work and create systems for them to be able to work in and out of America as they followed stories.

An undated image of Citizen TV investigative journalist Purity Mwambia. /FILE