Ruto’s Chief Soldier Asks Uhuru to Quit Drinking after outburst

President Uhuru Kenyatta and his DEputy William Ruto. PHOTO/COURTESY

President Uhuru Kenyatta’s public outburst at Kasarani on Sunday was bound to elicit many reactions across the political divide.

In one of his trademark rage, the President forgot that he was at a church function and went on rampage, accusing his detractors of thinking that he was their boy. He also called them Mikora.

“They will not stop me from the path I have made for myself and want to get to and where I want to take our people,” he said.

And now Oscar Sudi, one of Ruto lethal attack dogs, has come out guns blazing asking the President to quit drinking because leadership doesn’t rhyme with the influence of alcohol.

The controversial Kapseret MP has also demanded that he (Uhuru) should apologize to his stronghold supporters who sacrificed for him to clinch the presidency and yet he has sidelined them.

Kapseret MP Oscar Sudi. PHOTO/COURTSEY

“Today, I was shocked to hear our Jubilee member number 1 H.E President Uhuru Kenyatta claiming that nobody assisted him in hunting votes and further insinuating that there are leaders who were elected courtesy of him, ” read part of a post on Sudi’s Facebook Page.

He went on to claim that Uhuru looks so happy when he is visiting areas which did not vote him in especially in Nyanza unlike when he is visiting his stronghold where he looks aggrieved, disappointed and breathes fire.

Interestingly, the highly critical post later disappeared from his timeline but we have the screenshots.

 

Speaking at Moi International Sports Centre, Kasarani, where he was the chief guest at the Annual General Conference of the Akurinu Churches Assembly, Uhuru hit out at some unnamed politicians who he accused of sabotaging his agenda while undermining his quest to leave a legacy of a united country

In a thinly veiled attack on the Tanga Tanga movement, support movement for his Deputy Ruto presidential ambition, he dismissed them as “dirt” and “thugs” and vowed to hit back “at the right time.”

President Uhuru Kenyatta at Kasarani during the Akarino Annual Confrence. PHOTO/COURTESY

“I was not given votes by them, I am the one who looked for votes for them,” he said. Uhuru said he was keen to leave a legacy of a united Kenya.

“I want peace and I will look for peace for our people wherever I can find it and ensure that 50 years to come no one will be bothered on where he is and can conduct business peacefully,” he said.

 

 

 

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