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ICT Cabinet Secretary William Kabogo.

Information, Communications and the Digital Economy Cabinet Secretary William Kabogo has broken the government’s silence following a cybersecurity incident that affected President William Ruto’s official website, assuring Kenyans that there is no evidence sensitive government data was compromised.

In a statement issued on Saturday, July 18, Kabogo confirmed that the government had activated emergency cybersecurity response protocols immediately after detecting the incident and temporarily restricted access to the presidential website to facilitate investigations and restoration.

“The Ministry of Information, Communications and the Digital Economy is aware of reports regarding a cybersecurity incident affecting the official website of the President,” Kabogo said.

President William Ruto's official website was reportedly hacked on Saturday in what appears to be the latest cyberattack targeting Kenya's government digital infrastructure, with the attackers allegedly demanding a ransom of five Bitcoins, equivalent to approximately KSh41.3 million, to restore access.
President William Ruto’s official website was reportedly hacked on Saturday in what appears to be the latest cyberattack targeting Kenya’s government digital infrastructure, with the attackers allegedly demanding a ransom of five Bitcoins, equivalent to approximately KSh41.3 million, to restore access.

ICT Authority activated emergency response

Kabogo said the ICT Authority moved swiftly to contain the incident after it was detected.

“Upon detection of the incident, ICT Authority immediately activated established cybersecurity incident response protocols,” the Cabinet Secretary said.

He explained that access to the website was deliberately restricted as part of efforts to contain the attack and allow cybersecurity experts to investigate the incident.

“As a precautionary measure, access to the Presidential website was temporarily restricted to facilitate containment, forensic analysis and restoration efforts,” he added.

According to the ministry, mitigation measures have already been implemented and efforts to restore the website are ongoing.

Government rules out data breach

Kabogo sought to reassure Kenyans that preliminary investigations had not established any unauthorized access to sensitive government information.

“At this time, there is no evidence of unauthorized access to sensitive data, data exfiltration, or loss of information. Government systems and digital services remain secure and operational,” he said.

The statement comes after reports emerged earlier on Saturday indicating that hackers had compromised President Ruto’s official website and allegedly demanded five Bitcoins, valued at approximately KSh41 million, to restore access to the platform.

However, the government’s official statement did not comment on the reported ransom demand.

Forensic investigations underway

The Cabinet Secretary said the government has launched a comprehensive forensic investigation to establish exactly how the incident occurred.

He said the ICT Authority is working together with other government agencies and technical partners to determine the full scope of the attack.

“ICT Authority is working closely with the relevant Government agencies and technical partners to conduct a comprehensive forensic investigation and establish the full circumstances surrounding the incident,” Kabogo said.

Authorities have not indicated whether the attackers gained administrative access to the website or whether the incident was limited to disruption of public access.

Cybersecurity under renewed scrutiny

The latest incident has once again placed Kenya’s cybersecurity preparedness under the spotlight.

Government websites have increasingly become targets of cybercriminals and hacktivist groups over the past few years as Kenya continues to digitize public services.

In late 2025, several government websites—including portals belonging to ministries and state agencies—were temporarily disrupted following a coordinated cyberattack. The government later restored the affected platforms and maintained that no sensitive data had been compromised.

The Kenya Airports Authority (KAA) has also disclosed that it experienced a ransomware-related cyberattack, although it said airport operations were not disrupted and no sensitive operational information was lost.

Cybersecurity experts have repeatedly warned that governments around the world are facing increasingly sophisticated attacks targeting public institutions, with ransomware attacks becoming one of the fastest-growing threats.

Website restoration continues

While the presidential website remained unavailable for parts of Saturday as restoration efforts continued, the government insisted that the incident had not affected other government digital platforms.

Kabogo reiterated that government systems remain secure and operational, adding that the ongoing forensic investigation will help establish the exact circumstances surrounding the cyber incident.

The government is expected to issue further updates once investigators complete their analysis and the presidential website is fully restored.

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President William Ruto's official website was reportedly hacked on Saturday in what appears to be the latest cyberattack targeting Kenya's government digital infrastructure, with the attackers allegedly demanding a ransom of five Bitcoins, equivalent to approximately KSh41.3 million, to restore access.

President William Ruto’s official website was reportedly hacked on Saturday, July 18, 2026, in what appears to be the latest cyberattack targeting Kenya’s government digital infrastructure, with the attackers allegedly demanding a ransom of five Bitcoins, equivalent to approximately Ksh41.3 million, to restore access.

According to NTV Kenya, the hackers compromised the presidential website and displayed a ransom demand seeking payment in cryptocurrency before normal access to the site was disrupted. At the time of publication, State House had not issued an official statement confirming the reported ransom demand or the extent of the breach.

The reported attack has sparked fresh concerns over the security of Kenya’s critical government digital infrastructure, coming less than a year after dozens of government websites were hit by a coordinated cyberattack.

Latest reported cyberattack

The official presidential website serves as the primary online platform for State House, publishing presidential speeches, official statements, government announcements and national events.

Reports indicate that cybercriminals demanded five Bitcoins to restore access to the platform after compromising the website.

Bitcoin is a digital cryptocurrency commonly demanded in ransomware attacks because transactions are more difficult to trace than conventional financial transfers.

As of Saturday, government officials had not publicly confirmed whether any sensitive data had been compromised or whether negotiations with the attackers were underway.

Similar attacks have targeted Kenya before

The reported incident follows a major cyberattack in November 2025, when multiple government websites, including the presidency portal, ministries and several state agencies, were simultaneously compromised in a coordinated operation.

During that attack, websites belonging to the ministries responsible for Interior, Health, Education, Labour, Energy and several other government institutions were temporarily rendered inaccessible after hackers defaced their homepages.

The government later confirmed that emergency cyber response procedures had been activated and said the affected platforms were restored after the breach was contained. Authorities also launched investigations under the Computer Misuse and Cybercrimes Act.

At the time, Interior Principal Secretary Raymond Omollo attributed the attack to a group identifying itself as PCP@Kenya, while ICT authorities maintained that the incident affected website access and that no government or personal data had been lost.

Rising cyber threats

Kenya has experienced an increase in cyberattacks targeting both public institutions and private organisations in recent years.

Just last week, the Kenya Airports Authority (KAA) confirmed that it had previously suffered a ransomware-related cyber breach, although the agency said there was no significant operational impact and that no sensitive information was compromised. KAA also disclosed that the attackers had demanded a ransom, which the authority declined to pay.

Cybersecurity experts have consistently warned that ransomware attacks on governments are becoming increasingly sophisticated, with attackers often encrypting or disrupting systems before demanding payment in cryptocurrencies such as Bitcoin.

Awaiting official response

By the time of publication, neither State House nor the Ministry of Information, Communications and the Digital Economy had issued an official statement addressing the reported hacking of the presidential website.

It also remains unclear whether government cybersecurity teams have regained control of the platform, whether any public services were affected, or whether any sensitive information was accessed during the reported breach.

The incident is expected to intensify scrutiny of cybersecurity measures protecting Kenya’s critical digital infrastructure, particularly government websites that provide official communication and essential public services.

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