Ruto issues 33K title deeds to Coast residents, promises 200K more in 90 days
President William Ruto begins his 5-day tour of the Coast region on May 21, 2026. PHOTO | PCS
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President William
Ruto began a five-day extensive development tour of the Coast region on
Thursday morning by issuing more than 33,000 title deeds.
The land documents
were given to Coast residents from Lamu, Tana River, Kilifi, Mombasa, Kwale and
Taita-Taveta counties at Mama Ngina Drive, Mombasa County.
The titles are for
pieces of land in Kilifi/Weru Ranch, Mwele Simakeni, Msabaha, Ka Dzandani,
Wachu Kordentu and the Ronge Juu Registration Unit.
“Today, we are
here to address the challenge of squatters, citizens who live in fear of being
evicted. It is a commitment I made and it is a commitment I intend to keep,”
the President said.
Present at the
function were Deputy President Kithure Kindiki, Senate Speaker Amason Kingi,
Cabinet Secretaries Ali Hassan Joho (Mining) and Salim Mvurya (Sports),
Governors Abdulswamad Sheriff Nassir (Mombasa), Gideon Mung'aro (Kilifi),
Fatuma Achani (Kwale), Andrew Mwadime (Taita-Taveta), and Dhadho Gaddae Godhana
(Tana River), MPs and MCAs were present.
In the past three
years, President Ruto announced 1.5 million title deeds have been issued across
the country, with 381,000 deeds to residents at the Coast to address historical
land ownership challenges.
Additionally, he
said the government is processing an additional 200,000 title deeds in
different parts of the Coast region, which will be ready in the next 90 days,
benefiting more than one million residents.
“One million
residents will be issued with title deeds. They will stop being squatters and
become landowners,” he said.
To achieve this,
President Ruto directed the Ministry of Lands to speed up the sub-division and
adjudication processes so that every deserving beneficiary can receive their
rightful piece of land.
He explained that
the Government has successfully negotiated with absentee landlords and acquired
several parcels of land across the Coast region that will help in resolving
long-standing disputes and settling affected families.
He cited the case
of Ronge Juu in Taita Taveta, which was established in 1969, saying families
there have waited for nearly 60 years for formal recognition and ownership
documentation.
As part of the
Government’s efforts to promote orderly land ownership, President Ruto
explained, ongoing land adjudication processes are underway in various parts of
Coast region, including Vigurungani, Mtaa, Mazola, Chengoni, Bofu, Gandini, and
Kitengwani.
He also announced
that adjudication of land is also going on in Mihirini, Mwembe Kati,
Tsangalaweni, Kalia Ngombe, Viragoni, Godoma, Ngoroki, Chawia, and Mu Mari,
among others.
“This exercise is
aimed at identifying, demarcating and documenting land rights and is expected
to result in the issuance of more than 55,000 title deeds,” he said.
At the same time,
he said the Government is strengthening the registration of community land to
protect communal heritage and secure the rights of local communities, with six
units already formalised in Taita-Taveta and Tana River counties, and a further
nine are being processed acros the region.
Through deliberate
interventions, he said the Government has negotiated and acquired strategic
parcels of land in Kwa Punda in Changamwe (Mombasa) benefiting 8,500 people;
Junda in Kisauni (Mombasa) benefiting 12,000 people; Gazi in Msambweni (Kwale)
benefiting 3,000 people; Gombato in Kwale County, benefiting 7,000 people;
Shambani in Msabaha (Kilifi) benefiting 11,000 families; Ganda in Malindi
benefiting 9,000 families; and Takaungu in Kilifi benefiting 2,000 families.
“We have also
finalised negotiations to acquire additional land in Mashamasha (Lamu),
benefiting 2,000 families; Migingo in Malindi, benefiting 4,000 families; and
three separate locations in Likoni (Mombasa) benefiting 356 families.
"Additional
land has also been secured in Junda, Utange, and Bombo in Kisauni and will
benefit 2,100 families,” he said.
The President said
the Government is engaging landowners in Kagaa and Kiwandani (Kilifi);
Machungwani (Taita-Taveta); Parbat and
Waa (Kwale); Kitangale and Kibusu (Tana River); and Zumzum, Thathini, Ali Dina,
and Kwa Bulo (Mombasa), among others, to facilitate the settlement of
squatters.
The President
commended absentee landlords for agreeing to resolve the land issue through
dialogue.
“We all agreed the
solution will not be achieved through court battles but through dialogue,” he
said.
The President
explained that land should never be a source of perpetual conflict, but a
source of prosperity.
“It should create
jobs, attract investment, strengthen communities and expand opportunity,” he
said.
Prof. Kindiki noted
that the land ownership challenge was among the promises President Ruto had
made to the people of the Coast.
“Today, we are
here not to ask the land question but to provide the land answer and the land
solution,” he said.
CS Joho said lack
of title deeds has been a challenge for a long time, leaving residents in
constant fear of eviction.
CS Mvurya recalled
that addressing the land ownership challenge was among the top priorities of the
Kenya Kwanza administration, a commitment the government has delivered on.
Speaker Kingi said President Ruto has demonstrated commitment to addressing the various challenges facing the people of the Coast. He said the region has many challenges but the land ownership tops the list.
Governor Mung’aro said
land ownership issues had remained unresolved for decades despite repeated
campaign promises over the years.
He said the
Government was now implementing concrete measures to address the historical
injustices that have been ignored for far too long.
Governor Achani
thanked the President for addressing the land challenges, noting that it was
regrettable residents of the Coast have been living as squatters.
Governor Nassir
said no other administration has made deliberate efforts to address the land
question at the Coast as President Ruto is doing.
He noted that 30
per cent of the title deeds issued in the past three years of the Kenya Kwanza
administration have been given to the people at the Coast.
“This is not a
normal political meeting. This is a meeting in which we are delivering on the
promises that had been made,” he said.
He went on:
“Today, the President is not here to make promises. He has come to inform you
that he has delivered on the promise he made to you."
Governor Nassir said
the partnership between the Orange Democratic Movement (ODM) and United Democratic
Alliance (UDA) and Kenya Kwanza would continue delivering title deeds, universal
healthcare and water projects for the benefit of wananchi.
“We are united for
a cause,” he said.
Governor Godhana
urged President Ruto to continue resolving land ownership challenges, saying
the initiative has the support of leaders in the region.
On his part,
Governor Mwadime said: “We have not witnessed a meeting of such magnitude
convened to address the long-standing land challenge."
Kilifi North MP
Owen Baya said the people of the Coast will support President Ruto’s
re-election bid because of his development track record, citing the issuance of
title deeds.
Tana River Women
Representative Amina Dika said issuance of title deeds is not the only promise
the President has kept, saying he has also fulfilled pledges on
non-discriminatory provision of national identification cards, which has been a
challenge in the region.

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