Raila gets funding from foreigners to destabilise country, says Kamanda

Starehe MP Maina Kamanda visits business people in Nyamakima Nairobi during the Saba Saba rally on July 7,2014./file
Starehe MP Maina Kamanda visits business people in Nyamakima Nairobi during the Saba Saba rally on July 7,2014./file

Tanzanian President John Magufuli, South Sudan's Salva Kiir and other foreign powers are funding opposition chief Raila Odinga to destabilise Kenya, Starehe MP Maina Kamanda said yesterday.

"Raila has been touring all over. We know he is seeking funds from these governments with an intention of destabilising Kenya. You go ahead but we will not

allow you," he said.

Kamanda spoke during a press conference at a Nairobi hotel. He was with Dagoretti South MP Dennis Waweru and Embakasi West's John Ndirangu.

The State on Monday, without naming countries, claimed

there are individuals working with Kenya's neighbours to cause trouble in the country.

Government Spokesman Eric Kiraithe said intelligence reports point to some individuals who are working with the unnamed countries to ferment public unrest.

In what is likely to spark a diplomatic row between Kenya and the countries, Kiraithe spoke of a wider scheme to “create conditions of instability, insecurity, lawlessness and strife.”

He said the schemers are out to overthrow the government.

“The Government considers these contemptible undertakings to be a betrayal of Kenya and Kenyans. These are acts of treason,” Kiraithe said.

He said they will soon announce the investigation

findings and unmask the persons at the centre of the scheme.

“In due course the government will be revealing the results of our investigations, and unmasking these despicable traitors,” he said.

Kiraithe said a National Security Advisory Council meeting held on Monday resolved that those who collaborate with Kenya's enemies are also enemies of the state.

“Their acts will be met with the swift, full and unmitigated wrath of the law. We urge public patience on this matter and promise to be uncompromising in our quest for national security,” he said.

Recently, the council claimed that and its demands for the replacement of the IEBC Commissioners was just a smokescreen.

However Cord co-principal leader Moses Wetang'ula dismissed the allegations as "juvenile" and challenged the state to use its machinery to substantiate the "wild claims".

The opposition has been at loggerheads with the government over the push for IEBC commissioners to quit office on grounds that the latter cannot be trusted with the management of the 2017 polls.

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