Tag: Linda Mwananchi

  • Sibling Rivalry? Cracks Emerge Within Linda Mwananchi

    Sibling Rivalry? Cracks Emerge Within Linda Mwananchi

    What began as a spirited rebellion against President William Ruto’s broad-based government experiment and ODM’s perceived drift from its founding ideals is now exposing the familiar fault lines of Kenyan opposition politics.

    The Linda Mwananchi movement, which attracted large crowds to rallies in Nakuru, Kisumu, Mombasa and other towns, is increasingly grappling with an identity crisis. At the heart of the debate is a growing tension between collective resistance and individual political ambition. Despite repeated public declarations of unity, signs of strain are becoming harder to ignore.

    Embakasi East MP Babu Owino moved swiftly this week to dismiss speculation about a fallout with Nairobi Senator Edwin Sifuna. Speaking in an interview with Namlolwe FM, Owino insisted that the two leaders are pursuing different political paths. According to him, Sifuna is focused on a future presidential bid, while he is eyeing the Nairobi governorship in 2027 before eventually seeking the presidency in 2032.

    “There is no conflict between us,” Owino said.

    Yet the same interview revealed frustrations that have simmered beneath the surface for years. Owino recounted how he allegedly had to threaten chaos at Orange House in 2017 to secure an ODM ticket. He spoke of fighting legal battles after his election victory was nullified and claimed he received the party ticket for the 2022 elections only two days before the primaries.

    He also accused Dr Oburu Oginga of failing to convene a delegates’ conference for fresh ODM elections and declared that he would never again serve under another party leader. According to Owino, Raila Odinga would be the last leader under whom he served politically.

    Those are hardly the words of a politician content with a supporting role.

    Owino also reminded listeners that he played a central role in organising and mobilising the massive Linda Mwananchi rally in Kisumu, a remark many interpreted as an assertion of influence within the movement at a time when Sifuna’s profile appears to be rising fastest.

    A TIFA survey released in May appeared to underscore that reality. The poll showed Owino’s national support within the Linda Mwananchi camp dropping from 8 percent to 2 percent, while Sifuna registered 10 percent nationally and emerged as one of the movement’s strongest performers in Western Kenya.

    The emerging tensions are not only personal. They are also strategic.

    Sifuna has consistently argued that defeating an incumbent president will require a united opposition front. His willingness to engage with the emerging opposition alliance associated with Rigathi Gachagua and Kalonzo Musyoka has positioned him as a possible kingmaker or running mate in a broader coalition arrangement.

    Siaya Governor James Orengo has taken a different approach. He has doubled down on the idea of reclaiming ODM from within, presenting himself as the party’s de facto leader and signalling readiness for a presidential run. For Orengo, the battle is ideological as much as it is electoral.

    Saboti MP Caleb Amisi has added a generational dimension to the debate by openly describing Sifuna as the most credible presidential prospect among younger leaders. He has questioned whether veteran politicians such as Orengo can generate the level of excitement needed to mount a serious challenge against Ruto.

    Former Prime Minister Raila Odinga’s longtime ally Caroli Omondi has gone even further, warning that ODM faces an ideological split between the Linda Mwananchi wing and the Oburu-aligned “Linda Ground” faction. Omondi has even referenced Raila’s dramatic departure from Ford-Kenya in 1996 as a possible blueprint should ODM abandon what he views as its founding principles.

    The Registrar of Political Parties’ decision to reject attempts to register the Linda Mwananchi Party of Kenya only highlighted the movement’s uncertainty without resolving it. Although key leaders opposed the registration bid, the episode exposed the lack of consensus on the movement’s future direction.

    Should Linda Mwananchi become a political party? Should it remain a pressure group? Or should it merge into a broader opposition coalition?

    Those questions remain unanswered.

    Political analysts argue that the current turbulence is predictable. Many personality-driven political movements enjoy rapid growth during periods of public anger but struggle once they are forced to develop structures, define leadership hierarchies and identify candidates for elective office.

    For a movement that gained momentum through public frustration over taxation, the rising cost of living and perceived opposition compromises, the internal power struggles carry significant risks.

    Meanwhile, the evolving relationship between the Democracy for the Citizens Party (DCP) and Wiper has already complicated calculations in Nairobi. Their cooperation is widely viewed as a potential obstacle to Owino’s gubernatorial ambitions, particularly with reports that some influential figures favour Embakasi North MP James Gakuya for the city’s top seat.

    Every day spent managing internal rivalries and positioning for 2027 is a day the broader opposition risks failing to present a coherent alternative to Ruto’s re-election campaign.

    Public denials of discord are understandable. Few within the movement would want to hand the government an early political victory by openly acknowledging divisions.

    Yet polling trends, public statements and competing visions for the future tell a more complicated story.

    What once appeared to be a brotherhood forged in anti-government rallies is increasingly looking like a contest over leadership, influence and political succession. The real test for Linda Mwananchi may not be whether it can mobilise crowds, but whether it can prevent personal ambitions from eclipsing its founding mission of championing ordinary citizens.

    Kenyan voters have seen similar stories unfold before. The question now is whether Linda Mwananchi can rewrite the script before today’s cracks become tomorrow’s craters.

  • Sifuna’s Linda Mwananchi Seeks New Party Registration As Plans To Bolt From ODM Heighten

    Sifuna’s Linda Mwananchi Seeks New Party Registration As Plans To Bolt From ODM Heighten

    A quiet but consequential filing at the Office of the Registrar of Political Parties has thrown Edwin Sifuna’s Linda Mwananchi movement into fresh turmoil, with an application to register the mass opposition formation as a fully-fledged political party now under official review — even as the faction’s own founders insist they have made no such decision.

    The application, lodged last week at the ORPP by one Charles Wanyonyi, has set off a storm of speculation across Kenya’s fractured opposition landscape. Three theories are now circulating with equal ferocity: that it is a contingency move by the Sifuna camp to create a political exit ramp; that rivals within ODM or the broader Kenya Kwanza administration are attempting a hostile takeover of the potent brand; or that a political entrepreneur has moved swiftly to monetise a name that has captured the national imagination.

    Wanyonyi was guarded but did not deny the filing. “It is true I have made the reservation, but I cannot comment on the matter at the moment because it is still under review by the Registrar of Political Parties,” he told Nation. “Until it is approved, we can wait.”

    The ORPP confirmed the application was under review. Registrar John Cox Lorionokou said the process is governed by Section 4B of the Political Parties Act, which gives the office 14 days to conclude its review. A provisional certificate is only issued upon compliance with Sections 5, 6, 7, 8 and 9 of the Act. An ORPP official further clarified that names are assessed strictly against Section 8 of the Political Parties Act. “If it meets the parameters, it is approved; if it does not meet them, it is rejected,” the official said.

    “In Kenyan politics, branding is power. Lock someone out of a name and you complicate their logistics, messaging and legal standing.”

    Senior opposition insider, speaking off the record

    SIFUNA CAMP DENIES ANY ROLE

    Senior figures inside the Linda Mwananchi movement were categorical that the group has not taken any collective decision to register as a political party. Vihiga Senator Godfrey Osotsi, co-deputy party leader of ODM and one of the movement’s founders, was unequivocal. “As a team we have not discussed anything of that nature because we have not reached that stage,” he said. “We are determined to resolve the issues in ODM party and that is our priority.”

    Saboti MP Caleb Amisi appeared genuinely caught off guard when The Star put the application to him. “Hii sasa ni nini?” he posed rhetorically. “Ingekuwa renaissance maybe tungeongea. We have not discussed registration of Linda Mwananchi as a political party,” he said.

    Nairobi Senator Sifuna himself did not respond to multiple requests for comment on the filing. Yet privately, observers say the mere existence of the application speaks volumes about the calculus being run by multiple camps. Sifuna’s battle to retain his position as ODM Secretary General is simultaneously playing out at the Political Parties Disputes Tribunal, which issued a temporary stay halting his removal following a National Executive Committee meeting in Mombasa. Should that legal shield fail, a registered political vehicle would provide an immediate alternative.

    THE HOSTILE TAKEOVER THEORY

    Babu Owino
    Babu Owino

    Embakasi East MP Babu Owino was blunt about who he suspects is behind the move. “They are desperate people but they shall be defeated. This movement is bigger than just a name. They have taken the letter of the law but the spirit of the law is still with the people. The movement is not in the name,” he said.

    His remarks pointed suspicion squarely at political adversaries, whether within ODM’s mainstream, the ruling Kenya Kwanza coalition, or within factions of the United Alternative Government. Former Jubilee Party Secretary General Jeremiah Kioni was more direct, linking the application to State House. “Given the panicky nature of the regime in office and their inability to fulfil or deliver on any of their promises, that naturally is my immediate line of thought. It is the government dark force at work,” he said.

    A senior opposition insider, speaking off the record, warned that control of a political party name carries real logistical and legal consequences. “In Kenyan politics, branding is power. Lock someone out of a name and you complicate their logistics, messaging and legal standing,” the insider said. ODM National Chairperson Gladys Wanga used the development to press the Linda Mwananchi faction to come clean on its true intentions, noting that recent rallies had conspicuously dropped ODM symbolism. “They should come out clear on their real intentions in light of this application to form a new political party,” she said.

    THE MUGAMBI IMANYARA GAMBLE

    The third theory draws a direct historical parallel. In 2005, lawyer and politician Mugambi Imanyara famously registered the Orange Democratic Movement name ahead of the constitutional referendum, later negotiating a transfer of the brand to its political owners. Legal experts point out that Kenyan law does not require an applicant to demonstrate ideological ownership at the reservation stage. Only statutory compliance with the Political Parties Act is assessed. Should the name be approved and Linda Mwananchi later seek formal adoption of it, political or financial negotiations would be inevitable.

    Political analyst Chris Omore said the movement’s rapid national growth may have forced the question of institutionalisation. “When a movement begins to command national visibility and numbers, the question of structure inevitably arises. Registering a party can be both a bargaining chip and an insurance policy,” he said. He added that a purely commercial motive was equally plausible. “This could simply be someone betting that the name will gain even more traction and positioning themselves accordingly. It would not be unprecedented,” Omore said.

    FROM GRASSROOTS CRY TO NATIONAL FORCE

    Linda Mwananchi, loosely translated as “Protect the Citizen”, has undergone a dramatic transformation since it first emerged as a dissenting voice inside ODM following the formation of the broad-based government. What began as internal party opposition to rapprochement between ODM and President William Ruto’s United Democratic Alliance has evolved into a movement drawing massive crowds across Nairobi, Western Kenya and parts of the Rift Valley.

    The movement’s most dramatic moment came on February 15, 2026 in Kitengela, Kajiado County, when police dispersed a Linda Mwananchi rally and a youth, Vincent Ayomo, was shot dead. Rather than dampening the faction’s energy, the event appeared to intensify it, with subsequent rallies in Kakamega and other counties drawing comparable crowds. The Sifuna camp has accused security agencies of acting at the behest of political enemies.

    The movement’s key figures span a wide political spectrum. Siaya Governor James Orengo, a Senior Counsel whose activism dates to Kenya’s struggle against single-party rule in the 1980s, provides historical gravitas. Babu Owino brings confrontational energy honed through student activism. Senator Osotsi offers technical expertise as a former star witness in the 2017 presidential election petition. Together, they have sought to frame Linda Mwananchi as a generational and ideological cause rather than a factional dispute.

    In a separate but related development, a party called the People’s Renaissance Movement, which has been linked to the Sifuna circle, received a provisional registration certificate from the ORPP on January 15, 2026. Its slogan is “the change we need” and its officials have actively courted Gen Z voters to register as members. The emergence of that party alongside the Linda Mwananchi name application suggests that the infrastructure for a formal political breakaway is being assembled, whether or not individual leaders are willing to say so publicly.

    THE 2027 ARITHMETIC

    The political stakes behind the name battle are considerable. The Independent Electoral and Boundaries Commission projects that youth will account for nearly 70 per cent of voters in 2027. A recent study by OdipoDev and Tribeless Youth suggests seven out of ten Gen Z voters intend to participate in the next election. President Ruto won in 2022 with 7.17 million votes out of 14.3 million cast. Any movement capable of mobilising a significant portion of that youth bloc becomes a decisive force in the electoral arithmetic.

    Should Linda Mwananchi formalise into a standalone party and field candidates, it risks fracturing the anti-Ruto vote and potentially handing the incumbent a clearer path to re-election. That risk has not been lost on the United Alternative Government coalition, which groups Rigathi Gachagua’s Democracy for Citizens Party, Kalonzo Musyoka’s Wiper and Fred Matiang’i’s Jubilee. Sifuna himself has signalled openness to working with that formation, insisting that unseating Ruto demands unity. “We must beat William Ruto by at least 5 million votes to make it clear that we are tired of his administration. We must be one force against William Ruto,” he has said.

    Multimedia University’s Prof Gitile Naituli cautioned that public rallies by rival camps risk exposing divisions they seek to conceal. “If rival camps use rallies to signal individual ambitions, the events could expose the very divisions they seek to conceal,” he said.

    The ORPP’s 14-day review clock is now running. Whatever the outcome of the name reservation process, the application has already achieved one thing: it has forced Linda Mwananchi’s leaders to answer a question they have so far been able to defer. The movement that began as an internal ODM pressure group must now decide whether it will remain a faction within an increasingly hostile party structure, join the United Alternative Government coalition, or cross the Rubicon and become a party of its own.

  • Sifuna Hints At 2027 Presidential Bid, Says Linda Mwananchi Has The Numbers To Send Ruto Home

    Sifuna Hints At 2027 Presidential Bid, Says Linda Mwananchi Has The Numbers To Send Ruto Home

    Nairobi Senator Edwin Sifuna has, for the first time, strongly indicated he is ready to answer the call for the presidency in 2027, declaring that the Linda Mwananchi movement is undertaking a digital census of supporters to build what he describes as an irresistible wave to send President William Ruto home.

    In a series of interviews and rallies that have energised opposition supporters, the outspoken ODM Secretary General has sought to recast the political debate from ethnic mobilisation to what he terms people-powered regime change, warning that teargas and intimidation will not silence a growing movement.

    “I have answered the question. I have said that when the call comes, you cannot run away,” Sifuna told NTV on Tuesday when pressed about his presidential ambitions, in what allies describe as his clearest signal yet that he is positioning himself for the country’s top job.

    Speaking on Nation FM, Sifuna drew a sharp contrast with the current administration, dismissing development metrics as a campaign tool.

    “Please don’t ask me how many kilometres of road I am going to do. Can I just guarantee you that I will not kill your children? Can I just offer that guarantee?” he posed, framing the 2027 contest as a referendum on governance and human rights rather than infrastructure promises.

    Sisi ndio Sifuna, the people versus the state

    At the heart of Sifuna’s political strategy is a deliberate attempt to de-personalise the movement while building an infrastructure capable of challenging the Kenya Kwanza coalition’s ground network. He has repeatedly insisted that Linda Mwananchi must outlive any single political figure.

    “Don’t make this thing about Sifuna,” he cautioned during the NTV interview, warning that movements collapse when built around individuals. “If only one person stands out, it is very easy to be knocked off the pitch.”

    Even as he downplays his own candidacy, Sifuna is assembling what insiders describe as a parallel political structure. Young volunteers are developing a digital platform to allow supporters to register and contribute resources, from sound equipment to vehicles, creating a crowd-sourced campaign machine that bypasses traditional party funding channels.

    “We need to know what the numbers are and the sort of infrastructure we need to put in place to harness all this support,” he said. “We need to know how many we are. Is it five million of us, 10 million, or 20 million? It has to be a structured process, not just shouting numbers.”

    Voter turnout and the numbers calculus

    Sifuna’s focus on numbers reflects an assessment of Kenya’s electoral mathematics. The Independent Electoral and Boundaries Commission is targeting 6.8 million new voters ahead of 2027, with projections pointing to a register of about 27 million voters.

    He argues that Kenya does not have a voter registration problem but a turnout problem, citing the 64 per cent turnout in 2022, down from 78.9 per cent in 2017, as evidence that apathy has hurt the opposition more than alleged rigging.

    “All of us who are saying Ruto must go must be available to vote him out,” Sifuna said, insisting that unity and high turnout are the only viable paths to victory.

    Veteran lawyer Gitobu Imanyara recently echoed similar sentiments, arguing that overwhelming turnout would make manipulation mathematically difficult.

    Confrontations and state pushback

    The Linda Mwananchi rallies have already encountered resistance. In Kitengela, police dispersed supporters with teargas. In Kakamega, Sifuna claimed his travel plans were leaked, forcing his team to alter their landing plans to avoid disruption.

    “I want to warn the state that it will take more than teargas to stop the voice and the movement of the people,” he said, dismissing remarks by Interior Cabinet Secretary Kipchumba Murkomen that the chaos was stage-managed.

    Sifuna has called on the Independent Policing Oversight Authority to investigate the use of teargas at his rallies, saying canisters can be traced to specific stations and officers.

    A crowded opposition field

    Sifuna’s emergence as a potential contender complicates an already fragmented opposition landscape. Wiper leader Kalonzo Musyoka has positioned himself as a possible coalition flagbearer, while former Deputy President Rigathi Gachagua has sought to rally like-minded leaders. Former Interior Cabinet Secretary Fred Matiang’i has also signalled interest in a structured nomination process.

    Rather than consolidating under a single party, Sifuna appears to favour a coalition-style arrangement that allows leaders to retain their political vehicles while pursuing a shared reform agenda.

    Political analyst Joseph Mutua said the approach preserves room for negotiation and realignment as 2027 approaches.

    ODM tensions

    Sifuna’s stance has exposed fault lines within the Orange Democratic Movement . Party leader Raila Odinga is part of the broad-based government arrangement, while his brother Oburu Odinga has publicly indicated support for Ruto’s re-election.

    Vihiga Senator Godfrey Osotsi has countered that ODM has several leaders capable of running for president, naming Sifuna among them.

    Sifuna, who has faced attempts by party officials to remove him as Secretary General, has maintained that the party’s 2027 direction will ultimately be decided by its members.

    The Luhya factor

    Beyond coalition arithmetic, Sifuna has reignited debate about a possible Luhya presidency. Speaking in Kakamega during the burial of former Lugari MP Cyrus Jirongo , he challenged Prime Cabinet Secretary Musalia Mudavadi and National Assembly Speaker Moses Wetang’ula, both of whom support Ruto.

    “To Musalia Mudavadi and Moses Wetang’ula, we want to be on the presidential ballot in 2027. Since you have said you can wait for 2032, support our bid,” Sifuna said.

    He argues that the 2027 race should centre on civil liberties, police accountability and constitutionalism rather than ethnic arithmetic or elite power-sharing.

    As he prepares to resume rallies in Mombasa and other regions after the Ramadan break, Sifuna insists the movement is only beginning.

    Whether Linda Mwananchi can translate online momentum and street mobilisation into electoral power remains to be seen. But with his latest remarks, Sifuna has unmistakably placed himself in the 2027 conversation, setting up a direct contest with both the government and sections of his own party.

  • Sifuna’s Kakamega Rally Refuses To Fold Despite Teargas, State Push-Back

    Sifuna’s Kakamega Rally Refuses To Fold Despite Teargas, State Push-Back

    NAIROBI, Kenya Feb 21- In politics, opposition rallies rarely begin with anticipation of speeches. They begin with suspense on whether actually they will materialize.

    On Saturday, the Linda Mwananchi rally at Amalemba grounds in Kakamega led by embattled Orange Democratic Movement secretary general Edwin Sifuna was clouded by uncertainties.

    In the hours before the rally, Western Regional Police Commander Issa Mohamud told journalists that police had not been formally notified about the gathering and had only seen posters circulating on social media.

    “We will use all force to maintain peace. We will not accept lawlessness here. We cannot accept our country to go to the dogs,” he said.

    On 19th February, Sifuna has confirmed that he has officially notified Interior Cabinet Secretary Kipchumba Murkomen about his upcoming Linda Mwanachi Kakamega rally.

    Speaking on the floor of the Senate, he said that he had already sent the notification for the Kakamega rally to the Kakamega OCPD and that he was going to send the same notification to the Senate WhatsApp group.

    “By the way, that individual called Murkomen is still on the Senate WhatsApp group because he is a former senator. In fact, I have taken advantage of that. Yesterday I saw him say that he was not aware that we were going to Kitengela,”

    “I have sent a notification on the Kakamega rally that we have made to the OCPD of Kakamega to his WhatsApp number, and I am going to send it to the Senate WhatsApp group because he reads our messages there,” noted Sifuna.

    In a move that would actually derail the crowd from attending the political rally, Mahoud further claimed that security agencies had received intelligence suggesting that some individuals planning to attend the rally could be armed.

    “We have every kind of information. We are even told people who are coming from as far as Nairobi who are armed with rifles. That is what we have been told. That group who want to make a rally, they are armed, they said they don’t need the police,” he alleged.

    Teargas Disruption

    Even before the Linda Mwananchi Movement leaders made their way to Amalemba grounds, teargas were already billowing.

    Teargas canisters  were lobbed at event organisers ahead of the rally scheduled in Kakamega County today.

    Tension began building early in the morning as small groups of rowdy youths were seen uprooting and setting ablaze road reflectors near Amalemba Grounds, where the rally was scheduled to take place.

    At around 9:00am, a teargas canister was lobbed toward the venue, triggering panic among sections of the crowd. Some attendees responded by hurling stones, escalating the standoff.

    As the situation grew volatile, groups of young men organised themselves along key access roads leading to the grounds. They mounted informal barricades, stopping and inspecting vehicles headed toward the rally site in what appeared to be an attempt to control who accessed the area.

    Elsewhere in Kakamega town, rival political energies were also on display. Youths allied to the broad-based government cruised through the streets atop trucks and motorbikes, chanting slogans and waving placards emblazoned with the words “Two Tutam,” adding another layer of theatre to an already charged morning.

    Sea of Humanity

    Even so, Sifuna led the Linda Mwananchi team to a massive turnout in Kakamega, drawing a sea of supporters to the town ahead of their highly anticipated rally.

    Sifuna’s convoy wound its way through Kakamega town en route to Amalemba Grounds, with throngs of supporters lining the streets, chanting slogans and waving party flags.

    The atmosphere was electric, as Sifuna and Babu Owino stood atop their vehicles, greeting the crowd while music blared from speakers. The popular anthem “Jeshi la Baba” sent supporters into a frenzy, with cheers and waves echoing across the streets.

    He was joined by a host of Orange Democratic Movement (ODM) stalwarts, including James Orengo Caleb Amisi Richard Onyonka Brian Lishenga Jack Wamboka and Majimbo Kalasinga.

    Undettered Crowd

    But the smooth flow of the rally would soon be disrupted as soon as the Nairobi Senator took to the podium. Despite Siaya Governor James Orengo and Vihiga Senator Godfrey Osotsi having uninterrupted speech to the crowd, the rally was almost disrupted when Sifuna took to the podium.

    Teargas canisters arced into the gathering, landing near the stage and within the crowd. White clouds spread quickly across the dias.

    Sifuna had barely risen to offer his opening remarks when canisters landed near the dais, sending thick white plumes billowing into the crowd. Supporters scattered in panic, running in all directions to escape the choking fumes.

    Amid the chaos, Sifuna vowed the meeting would proceed despite the disruption.

    “This meeting will not be disrupted as they did in Kitengela. We will extinguish it like bhang in prison. This meeting will not be disrupted, it will not end,” he declared.

    He urged supporters to remain calm and avoid confrontation with police.

    “Young people, don’t throw stones at them. We will extinguish this teargas like bhang and continue with this meeting,” he said.

    Soon after the Supporters regrouped as others tried to attack individual suspected to disrupt the meeting by lobbying teargas.

    Sifuna urged supporters not to throw stones, not to retaliate, and not to scatter. The meeting, he insisted, would continue. The ODM Secretary General insisted if  the aim was to disperse them, that wouldn’t happen.

    Kitengela Mayhem

    Just days earlier in Kitengela, a similar gathering had ended in chaos after police fired teargas and live bullets as a young man lost his life.

    Chaos erupted on Sunday when police fired teargas at a gathering in Kitengela as Nairobi Senator Edwin Sifuna and other leaders addressed supporters.

    The disruption came shortly after Sifuna introduced fellow leaders who had joined him at the rally. Despite the upheaval, Sifuna later thanked the residents of Kitengela for turning out and urged them to remain steadfast.

    “Thank you, Kitengela. Despite all the harassment, intimidation, and violence this morning, you showed up. They first destroyed our dais and sound equipment, and now state operatives have teargassed a peaceful assembly, bringing it to an abrupt end. We shall not relent,” Sifuna said.

    When the first teargas canister was thrown, Sifuna called on the crowd to stay calm while trying to figure out who was disrupting the rally. More canisters followed, sending crowds scattering in all directions. Boda boda riders and residents quickly sought safety as the situation became chaotic.

    The rally ended abruptly, with leaders leaving the scene while supporters dispersed across the town.

    Sifuna condemned the heavy-handed response, saying security officers and hired personnel used excessive force against peaceful attendees. He also vowed to pursue justice for Vincent Ayomo, who was allegedly shot dead during the gathering.

    “We will pursue justice for his family and ensure those responsible for his death are held accountable,” Sifuna said.