People are quick to make promises, most of which go unfulfilled.
Just like new year resolutions, individuals find themselves at crossroads between sticking with them or discarding for a better cause.
Garissa Governor Ali Korane found himself at this tricky situation.
Days after his much-hyped swearing ceremony, he promised his electorate that he would be personally meeting them on Thursdays.
Korane had assured them that his offices would be open every Thursdays to engage the residents on one on one interaction.
And as fate would be, Korane managed to engage the locals for barely a week.
As it was the case, residents got the golden opportunity to meet the governor excitedly exclaimed that they scored it right while exercising their democratic right of voting.
Quite a number were very optimistic that with the weekly interactions, they would be able to air their concerns to the right office.
And as weeks passed, residents who visited the governor's office found his personal assistant who would just jot down their concerns to forward to the rightful person.
The culture slowly faded away to the extend that the governor's aide could no longer be reached even on the said date.
This false promise has since triggered the talk that the most dishonest people are politicians.
They make too many promises and do too little to fulfill.
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