The government is quietly rolling out a new plan that could change the way Miraa farmers and traders operate forever. Through the Ministry of Cooperatives, officials want to take direct control of Miraa supply by forcing farmers into specialized cooperatives.
Authorities claim the move will stabilize prices and strengthen export markets. But for farmers, exporters, and communities that depend on miraa, this is more than just regulation. It is a radical shift that risks giving the state unprecedented power over their livelihoods.

Government Push to Control Miraa Supply Through Cooperatives
The Principal Secretary of the State Department of Cooperatives, Patrick Kilemi, recently revealed that new Miraa cooperatives will be set up to regulate how the crop is harvested, transported, and sold.
He said the government’s goal is to “control the supply side of Miraa” so that production can match demand. According to him, too many farmers rush to harvest even when there is no ready market, creating a buyers’ market where traders dictate prices.
Kilemi insists that once cooperatives are formed, they will stop this exploitation by monitoring output and giving farmers collective bargaining power. The cooperatives would also be tasked with managing sales during peak seasons, ensuring that traders and middlemen no longer dominate the Miraa economy.
Behind the government’s polished language, however, lies a deeper question. Is this really about protecting farmers, or about tightening state control over one of Kenya’s most controversial yet profitable crops?
Why Farmers Fear the Miraa Supply Through Cooperatives Plan
For decades, Miraa farmers have operated in a free-flow system. Harvesters cut, load, and rush their produce to market without bureaucracy. The crop is perishable and loses value quickly, which is why speed has always been everything.
By forcing farmers into cooperatives, critics argue, the government is inserting another layer of control that could slow down the trade. Instead of harvesting when they want, farmers may now need permission from cooperative managers. This shift risks concentrating power in the hands of a few leaders aligned with government interests.
Farmers in Meru, Embu, and Tharaka Nithi already worry that the cooperatives will become gatekeepers, deciding who can sell, how much they can harvest, and at what price. For a crop declared a scheduled crop under the Crops Act of 2013, Miraa is already tightly regulated. Adding another layer of cooperative bureaucracy could strangle the fast-moving trade.
Many believe the plan is less about stabilising the market and more about squeezing farmers to give government agencies full visibility and control over production volumes, export routes, and revenues.
Export Promises and the Political Side of Miraa
The government has tried to sweeten the deal by pointing to new export opportunities. Just weeks ago, the Agriculture and Food Authority (AFA) announced that Djibouti had officially opened its doors to Kenyan Miraa.
Officials presented this as a breakthrough, saying the market would strengthen diplomatic ties and boost farmer earnings. Exporters were told to comply with strict regulations, including certification and permits.
But for many in the Miraa belt, the announcement raises suspicions. If the Djibouti market is so promising, why would farmers need to be forced into cooperatives before they can benefit? Insiders suggest that the state wants to centralise export licensing so that only government-approved cooperatives can supply the new international markets.
This could lock out small-scale farmers and exporters who have been the backbone of the Miraa trade for decades. By controlling the supply chain from farm to export, the government effectively decides who profits and who gets left behind.
At the same time, authorities are promising tighter security along transport routes, claiming Miraa trucks are often targeted by thieves. While safety is important, critics argue that this is just another way for the state to justify putting Miraa under heavy monitoring.
Cartels Fight for Control of the Miraa Industry
Miraa is more than a crop. It is the lifeblood of entire communities across Meru, Tharaka Nithi, Embu, and beyond. The government’s plan to channel Miraa supply through cooperatives is being sold as a stabilization measure, but its true impact may be far-reaching.
By pushing farmers into structures they did not ask for, the government risks killing the flexibility that has sustained the trade for generations. The new rules could create bottlenecks, limit access to markets, and hand excessive power to cooperative managers aligned with political interests.
As the government courts international markets like Djibouti, the Miraa farmer in the village may find himself sidelined, watching the crop that built his livelihood slip further into state control.
The debate is no longer about prices or exports. It is about who really controls Miraa — the farmer, the trader, or the state. And in that fight, livelihoods and entire regional economies hang in the balance.