Hell almost broke loose at the burial service of National Assembly speaker Moses Wetangulaâ mother after Transnzoia Governor George Natembeya clashed with Majority Leader in the parliament Kimani Ichungâwa on Friday.
In his speech at the burial ceremony, Trans Nzoia Governor George Natembeya urged the president to keep his word and end abductions in the country.
He said it is sad that some leaders are denying that young people are being abducted.
âHata mimi wananitukana kwa mtandao. If it canât change, people should not be killed or abducted because of that,â Natembeya added.
Speaking during the burial of Moses Wetangulaâs mother on Friday, January 3, Ichungâwah accused Gachagua of orchestrating the abductions. The remarks come barely a week after Gachagua took a swipe at President William Ruto over the abductions.
While attacking Trans Nzoia Governor George Natembeya, who was also present during the burial and condemned the abductions, Ichungâwah blamed Natembeya for not using the powers he had during his tenure as the Police Regional Commander to expose those behind the abductions.
âGachagua was the orchestrator of abductions so that he could blame President Ruto. Shame on you Governor Natembeya. You cannot complain about abductions when you were the key abductor of Kenyans under the last regime,â Ichungâwah said.
The remarks were made in a fiery speech aimed at Natembeya, who, while addressing mourners, called for an end to the abductions, sparking what became a scathing attack on the former officer.
Natembeya received a hostile reception at the burial, where the supremacy battle between him and Wetangula was evident as mourners jeered at him attempting to stop him from making his speech. After several interventions, the crowed allowed him to speak.
âWe want abductions to end. The youth are using foul language on social media. That needs to change. If it cannot change, people should not be killed or abducted because of it,â Natembeya noted.
Ichungâwah went on to blame the governor for dividing the people of the Western communities ethnically through incitive politics. According to Ichungâwah, Natembeya will not be successful in his bid to divide the people.
He compared Natembeyaâs alleged division of the community to that of Gachagua, who was accused of promoting ethnic division in the country.
âThe divisive politics that you are promoting will not be successful. Your leader in divisive and ethnic politics, former Deputy President Rigathi Gachagua, is the one behind the abductions,â Ichungâwah continued. Ichungâwah warned Natembeya against selling fear to the people of the western region.
Furthermore, the Kikuyu MP accused Natembeya of being behind the killings where bodies were discovered in the River Yala and the Mau evictions.
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