Opposition leader Raila Odinga on Sunday
sensationally claimed that the gunmen who stormed an estate in Likoni
and shot dead three people had been sent by the government.
Speaking
at Ushindi Baptist Church in Likoni on Sunday, the ODM leader said the
government was shielding the killers. He claimed that Cord had the names
of the gunmen.
“We have the names but we know they
will not be arrested because they sent them,” Mr Odinga said of the July
21 attack at Soweto in Likoni.
DEMAND FOR ARREST
After
the attack, the hooded killers, who numbered between six and eight,
dropped leaflets claiming they were avenging the killing of their people
in Mpeketoni, Lamu County.
Mombasa County Commissioner Nelson Marwa, however, blamed ODM for the Likoni killings.
On Sunday, Mr Odinga demanded that Mr Marwa substantiate his allegations or be arrested for spreading falsehoods.
“The
people who were killed in Lamu were innocent Kenyans. Instead of
arresting the killers, you send gangs to kill other innocent people in
Likoni. What kind of a government is this that kills its own people?” he
asked.
Mr Odinga also told off Lands Cabinet Secretary
Charity Ngilu who spent most of the day visiting Lamu and Tana River
counties accompanied by surveyors. It was in readiness for a 100,000
title deed-issuing exercise by October.
REFERENDUM CALL
Mr
Odinga said Mrs Ngilu had no business meddling in land matters because
Jubilee officials intend to grab tracts of land whose 99-year lease had
expired.
“The Cabinet Secretary should leave the registry for clerks,” he said adding that her intentions were suspicious.
He
said Cord recognised that the mandate to revoke the 500,000 acres in
Lamu lay in the hands of the National Lands Commission and not Mrs
Ngilu.
He also accused the government of arresting Lamu Governor Issa Timammy over the Mpeketoni killings without any evidence.
He said without proper security, it would be difficult for Kenyans to have better lives and development.
“Insecurity
across the country as experienced in Wajir, Mandera, Lamu and Mombasa
is enough evidence that the government has failed,” he told the
congregation.
The former Prime Minister urged Kenyans to desist from engaging in religious wars and co-exist peacefully.
Senator Hassan Omar said Kenyans were living in difficult times and everyone was feeling the impact.
He
said some of the leaders were against the Constitution because of land
matters and now were hoodwinking Kenyans that they would provide
solutions.
“These people cannot be trusted to bring change. It is through referendum that these issues can be sorted,” he said.
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