Andrew Kibe weighs in on Morara Kebaso kneeling, praying with employees

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Controversial media personality Andrew Kibe, on Friday, January 23, 2026, responded to Morara Kebaso’s action of kneeling to pray with his employees.

This came after Morara Kebaso, a businessman and lawyer operating within Nairobi, posted a video on his social media account showing himself kneeling down alongside his employees for a word of prayer.

Kibe saw this as an opportunity to “hit him with his hammer” and insinuated that Kebaso was forcing his employees to kneel with him for the prayer.

He went further to defend his line of thought by saying that he used to do the same with his employees back in the day, while he was saved and “happily married”.

Kibe's post on X. PHOTO/Screengrab by K24 digital.
Kibe’s post on X. PHOTO/Screengrab by K24 digital.

“When I was saved and ‘happily married’ I used to force my employees to do this nonsense every morning. When you’re a Kinuthia, you’re a Kinuthia!” Andrew Kibe wrote.

Accompanying the video of himself kneeling during the prayers with his employees, Morara captioned the video “There is God in heaven who answers prayers. He has brought us this far. We have gratitude in our hearts.”

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Controversial views

Known for his controversial views, the media personality recently threw shade at those who blame their problems on alcohol.

Kibe used his Instagram platform to call out the hypocrisy of blaming alcohol for personal failures. He argued that alcohol is rarely the root cause; instead, the real problem lies in how individuals behave under the influence.

In his view, citing intoxication is often just a convenient way to justify a lack of self-control.

“You don’t have self-control. You have no self-control. You don’t know what to do when you get drunk. Maybe you shit in your pants. So you are a nuisance,” Kibe said,

For Kibe, alcohol acts as a mirror that heightens existing traits instead of creating new ones. He pointed out that people use alcohol as a scapegoat to escape the hard work of self-regulation. He insisted that the “problem” isn’t found in the bottle, but in a person’s lack of control over their own impulses.

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