
President Uhuru Kenyatta has at long last talked with respect to the arrested of eight MPs at various police headquarters over hate speech Remarks. Amid a meeting with Kenyan Journalists in Belgium, President Kenyatta expressed that the nation would not be isolated along tribal lines by leaders indicating to practice majority rule government.
Uhuru included that those actuating Kenyans would confront the law regardless of the positions they held. "Those individuals inciting Kenyans will face the full hand of the law, irrespective of who they are. If we want to exercise democracy let us do so on the basis of political agenda but never again on tribe or religion ," he expressed.
The Head of State hit out at the Leaders defending and demanding the release of the eight hate speech suspects expressing: "When you claim that your Constitutional rights or those of others are being violated, it is also prudent that you read the Constitution." The President talked minutes after CORD Leader Raila Odinga demanded the release of kept MPs within the following 24 hours inability to which there would be 'outcomes'.
The Opposition leaders addressed to the media in the wake of being denied an opportunity to see three of their lawmakers held at Pangani Police Station. The coalition cautioned that if the bolted up officials were not set free with no charges, it would continue the week by week hostile to IEBC showings, land from the discourse on IEBC, and also hold a night vigil on Saturday out of appreciation for the prisoners.
Prior on, Opposition pioneers pointed the finger at Mr Kenyatta for staying quiet regardless of derisive expressions from Jubilee pioneers especially, Gatundu South MP Moses Kuria's comments on the death of Odinga.