Thursday, 13 February 2014

Kimemia summons USAID, Boniface Mwangi over plans to “topple Kenyangovt”

FRANCIS-KIMEMIA-OFFICE
The National Security Advisory Committee (NSAC) has asked the Ministry of Foreign Affairs to urgently summon the United States Agency for International Development (USAID) officials  with IMMEDIATE EFFECT to  give more information over its plans to topple the Government using activists.
In a statement by NSAC Chairman and Secretary to the Cabinet, Mr Francis Kimemia, USAID was said to funding the destabilization of the Kenyan government.
Kimemia said that NSAC is in possession of credible intelligence documents and information detailing how the US donor agency has consistently funded the demonstrations by activists ,including  demos clandestinely planned, funded and led by  two identified initially as Boniface M and John G. (completion of investigations will reveal their full identities) on February 13, 2014 . Kimemia said that a defrocked pastor has also been funded to pour vitriol on parliament concurrently.

NSAC noted that the planned youth revolution of 2012 sponsored by US foreign agency but scuttled by Kenyans is fresh in Kenyans’ mind.
He said that the consistent plans to destabilize the current Government will not be tolerated at any costs, especially where activists are sustainably bribed to tarnish the country’s and Leaders’ reputation regionally and internationally.
“NSAC is of the view that it is in the national  interest that USAID urgently warns and debriefs would be demos and responds to these reports, in tandem with international protocols that regulate tolerance or expulsion of Agencies that undermine sovereignty of a legitimate and democratic Govt. and interfere with internal matters of countries,” the statement read.
“NSAC wants a strong Kenya’s   displeasure communicated to the metropolitans’ leaders regarding impunity, notoriety, & high handed of distraught diplomats who have no respect on incumbent  leadership following the recent general elections,” concluded Kimemia.

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