Veteran comedian and humanitarian activist Eric Omondi is looking for a former professional health reporter, Nasibo Kabele, who is now living on the streets.....CLICK HERE TO READ THE FULL ARTICLE>>>

In a post shared on his Instagram account on Friday, September 13, 2024, Omondi expressed compassion towards Nasibo’s current situation and asked his followers who knew her whereabouts to help him locate the former reporter.

Additionally, the activist mobilised his team‘Sisi kwa Sisi‘ to lift the former renowned reporter and help her snap back.

“This is sad. Please help me find her. Let’s lift her. Give her back her shine. Where is this place? How can we reach her?” Omondi asked. Nasibo Kabele is a former health reporter who was on the frontlines covering COVID-19 news alongside the former Health Cabinet secretary, Mutahi Kagwe.

She started suffering from mental health challenges after the COVID-19 period. In an undated viral video, Nasibo narrated her touchy story, revealing that during the 2020 pandemic, she received a presidential award for her exemplary coverage of COVID-19.

She went on to say that having worked in the media industry for six years, she felt overwhelmed with the workload during the pandemic after some of her colleagues were fired, leaving her with four others. She further stated that seeing COVID-19 patients passing away messed up her mental health.

Additionally, the mother of one disclosed that later on her life changed drastically after she was diagnosed with d********n, which led her to quit her job.

“My name is Nasibo; I have one child, and I worked in the media for six years before I got d********n, so during that time my life changed drastically,” she narrated.

“In 2020, I was given the presidential award. I was a health reporterhata hiyotime ya COVID-19 Mutahi Kagwealikuwa akiniitanga, so vile walichuja watu kwaoffice I was among the five that were left in the media station I was working with.

“Sovile tuliwachwa hiyo kazi ikanisumbua unaona watu wakikufa iyo time ya COVID-19, sonikabaki kwa ofisi, then I was diagnosed with d********n, later admitted to Chiromo Hospital, and I was put on anti-depressant medication, but after going for two to three treatments, I decided to quit my job.”

Nasibo further appealed to well-wishers to help her with a decent home and also get back into the media industry, not as a reporter but as a podcaster.

“P****e don’t understand that d********n is real. I would like to come back to the media industry, but on a different platform. I would like to do a podcast. Maybe if I get the equipment like a microphone, I can do it. I used to be a writer, but the media is changing, so I would like to do something along the podcast area and vlogging,” Nasibo appealed.

“I have done podcasts before; also, if I can get somewhere to stay because here is not safe, it is cold, I am likely to get pneumonia….CLICK HERE FOR MORE ARTICLE>>>

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