DP Kindiki leads fight against music industry cartels, promises end to exploitation

DP Kithure Kindiki hosts over 2,000 musicians, content creators and artists at his home in Irunduni, Tharaka Nithi County, on August 20, 2025. PHOTO | DPCS

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The government has intensified the fight against cartels
exploiting musicians, performing artists and content creators in order to
enable them to earn more from their talents.
Deputy President Kithure Kindiki said the Ruto administration
has prioritized streamlining the sector that has for long been under the siege
of unscrupulous individuals keen to reap where they have not sown.
The second-in-command on Wednesday hosted over 2,000
musicians, content creators and artists at home in Irunduni, Tharaka Nithi
County and assured them that the Kenya Kwanza Administration will not abandon
them at the mercy of cartels out to impoverish them.
“The cartels in the creative industry must pack and go. We are
not requesting them, we are demanding them to exit the stage and allow
musicians, content creators and performing artists to benefit from the sweat
and talent that God gave them,” DP warned.
Prof. Kindiki, who is leading the fight to rid the industry of
the cartels, said the government will not relent until the artists and creators
get their rightful share.
Noting the millions of money siphoned by those contributing
the least as musicians and creatives suffer from earning peanuts, he said there
will be no negotiations that will extend an exploitative agenda.
“We will stand firm and fight the cartels. They must stop
exploiting the artists. This time round there is no escape route for them, they
must leave. It is not possible for one to earn Ksh.2 million and yet the singer
earns Ksh.2. It is not possible,” he noted.
He said the government will not be intimidated and will
repulse any attempt to frustrate it to give up.
“No amount of resistance, court orders or frustration will stop
the government from empowering talented youth in the creative and performance
industry.
The President has assigned me this work. We will not relent in
rooting out cartels in the industry. You are going to see a lot of progress
this year,” he added.
The battle is already being intensified from many angles
including legal means with the government sponsoring various Bills in
Parliament geared at improving earnings of the creatives who have suffered for
many years.
The State Department of Creative Economy under the Ministry of
Youths has also been specially created to look after the affairs of those
depending on the sector.
“We have two new Bills; The Creative Economy Support Bill,
2024 and Culture Bill, 2024 which are now before Parliament. The two will ensure
the huge potential in the creative economy is maximized so that our creative
artists can earn from their sweat and talent,” DP revealed.
Following successful battles against cartels in the coffee,
tea and sugar sectors that have led to notable increase in earnings for
farmers, the Deputy President said it is time to shift attention to the
creative sector which is worth billions of shillings that end up in undeserving
pockets.
“We are starting a national movement to liberate artists,
musicians, content creators from the jaws and bondage of cartels and criminals
taking away their money.
We cannot have a country where people exploit others. The
culture of exploitation must come to a stop and the time is now. We will fight
for you,” he declared.
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