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KRA leaders launch a tax club at Alliance High School, urging students to view tax compliance as patriotism and compelling the youth to anchor the nation’s future in integrity.

The future of Kenya is not in its soil, but in the character of its youth. In a powerful call to action, the Kenya Revenue Authority (KRA) top brass has returned to their roots at Alliance High School, challenging the next generation to redefine patriotism through integrity and civic duty.
KRA Board Chairman Ndiritu Muriithi and Commissioner General Humphrey Wattanga, both alumni of the prestigious institution, didn't just visit to reminisce; they came to recruit soldiers for a different kind of war—the war against corruption and economic stagnation. Launching the "Alliance High School Tax Club," the leaders pitched taxation not as a burden, but as the ultimate act of nation-building.
"You are not just students; you are the custodians of Kenya's economic destiny," Wattanga told the hushed assembly of students. The narrative was clear: the roads, hospitals, and schools of the future will not be built by aid, but by the honest contributions of citizens who refuse to cut corners.
The visit underscored a critical shift in the taxman's strategy—moving from enforcement to education. By catching them young, the KRA hopes to inoculate the future workforce against the culture of evasion that has plagued the nation for decades. The newly launched Tax Club is designed to be an incubator for financial literacy, teaching students the mechanics of public finance and the moral weight of contribution.
Muriithi reflected on his own formative years at the school, crediting the institution's strict discipline code for shaping his leadership style. "Leadership is defined less by titles and more by ethical conduct," he asserted. It was a direct challenge to the students to reject the "get rich quick" mentality that often permeates the national psyche and instead embrace the slow, steady path of honest enterprise.
This initiative is part of a broader KRA campaign to humanize the tax authority. Often viewed with fear, the agency is working to rebrand itself as a partner in development. By engaging students, they are betting that a generation raised on the values of transparency will naturally become a generation of compliant taxpayers.
As the event concluded, the challenge hung in the air. The students of Alliance High have been given the torch. The question remains whether they will carry it with the integrity their predecessors demand, ensuring that the Kenya of tomorrow is built on the solid foundation of civic honesty.
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