AN OPEN LETTER TO THE PRESIDENT

Mr. President,
Ovations to a coherent incumbency...
I will repress this letter to be precise and forthcoming. Your 2017/22 manifesto is grievance-savvy just overly ambitious, we Kenyans are not on the same page with you.
I am a junior youth, set to graduate this December with a political Science major from the University of Nairobi. My class and I have just joined a group of over a million jobless youths across the state, who graduated with noteworthy alma mater. 
We the youths, contributed to at least 10 million registered voters, meaning, it is safe to say, it is because of us you are the president elect. Mr. President, you owe us.
When we vote, it is not to spite the opponent, or demonstrate allegiance to our tribes. It is because we have grievances that should be addressed.
You came up with the youth development fund and other programmes to help elevate youths in your last tenure. Forgive me if I don’t say thank you because that was and still is an insult to young men and women who have dedicated their life to work hard in school and achieve greatness.
How is a youth fund going to help a medical graduate, a graduate from law and engineering school? Even if the kshs. 60,000 divisive to a group of 6 would turn into manna and fund a hospital start-up, one will still need to practice in connoisseur institutions.
In short, you were a hardworking president but you forgot the primary security problems, the basics that drive our economy, which is employment.
My fellow elites stay in informal settlements with rich Alma mater, a modest way to say they live in slums and can barely make three meals a day or their cheap rent.
Will you choose to see seedlings of a promising future wither away when you could do something?
Mr. President, we ask you and your team to come up with a funded systematic programme that ensures the employment of a noticeable percentage of youths in every county. 
We do not want pitty petty charity cash, we want to work for organisations that complement our expertise, skills and intelligentsia and in future we will afford our own business funding in our terms.
You asked for our vote, we gave it to you and now we are asking for what we rightfully deserve. Mr. President, we did our part, it is time you delegate yours.
Meanwhile, I wish you an industrious and reaping 5 years ahead.
Aluta continua, vitoria e certa!
Yours sincerely,Sally Boyani