National Assembly Majority Leader Aden Duale Friday last week, threatened
to withdraw support for the Jubilee government over what he termed
as arbitrary arrests of “his people.”
This is the first
time Mr Duale, ranked high up in the government pecking order, has made
unsavoury remarks about President Kenyatta’s government.
“We
stand by the interests of our people. There should be no doubt about
that,” Mr Duale said Friday at a rally in Eastleigh attended by over 20
MPs and Senators from North Eastern, Coast and Upper Eastern regions.
He
said police were targeting Muslims. “We were elected by the Muslim
community and we shall defend their interests,” he said amidst chants
from the charged crowd.
“It shall no longer be business
as usual. We shall not and will never allow our people to be
discriminated against, never,” Mr Duale declared.
Mandera Senator Billow Kerrow accused the government of encouraging youth radicalisation by the way it was fighting terrorism.
“The
issue is not the Muslim clerics. They become radicalised through the
actions of the government. Makaburi was labelled a terrorist and was
under 24-hour surveillance but when he is killed, the government says it
doesn’t know who did it,” he said.
The legislators
accused officers from Pangani police station of raping women and
demanding bribes from suspects for their release.
Nairobi County Commissioner Njoroge Ndirangu, however, said the operation will continue.
“We
are not targeting Eastleigh alone. This operation started in Karen in
February and will spread to the whole of Nairobi,” he said.
Source : Daily Nation
Source : Daily Nation