Our commitment to accountability and transparency in the management of public resources for Northern Kenya remains unwavering. For decades, the people of the region endured marginalization, often held hostage by clan elders and their own elected leaders as much as by successive governments since independence. That era is over. Sessional Paper No. 10 of 1965 can no longer be used to mask ineptitude or incompetence. The Constitution of Kenya 2010—together with devolution, devolved funds, the Equalization Fund, development partner support, and the Constituency Development Fund—has progressively and permanently shifted the landscape. The genie is out of the bottle. Today, a visit to my friend Mr. Fazul Mahamed’s office in Karen offered space for reflection on the urgent and non-negotiable demand for reform and accountability in Northern Kenya.