Homa Bay Woman Representative Gladys Wanga has dismissed the United Democratic Alliance’s (UDA) rebuke of Meru Senator Mithika Linturi’s contentious remarks at Saturday’s rally as half-hearted and superficial.
Wanga claims that the Deputy President William Ruto-led camp does not really regret Linturi’s utterances, terming their Monday apology as a weak attempt to save face following uproar from Kenyans.
“After uproar from Kenyans, (UDA) have come to apologize for what Senator Linturi said, yet they were seated at the very same rally. Nobody, after Linturi spoke, bothered to come up and say what Linturi said is not in line we believe in, the rally went on,” Wanga said.
She has called out what she terms as complicity by the DP due to failure to condemn Linturi’s remarks at the Eldoret rally, arguing that it might well be interpreted as an agreement to what the senator said.
“When Linturi finished speaking, he went ahead to hug the Deputy President and it was a sign of approval for what he had said because otherwise, he would have returned him to the stage to go and clarify,” said Wanga.
“He went ahead and hugged him, shook his hand heartily and sat him down like ‘what you have said is truly what we agreed… If it were not for Kenyans coming up and saying ‘Do not bring us madoadoa politics,’ it would be a problem,” added the legislator.
Linturi and the whole UDA came under fire over comments captured in a viral video which have been construed as advocating for tribal segregation.
In the video, Senator Linturi is seen telling the crowd in Eldoret: “…Watu wa Uasin Gishu musicheze na Kenya, na kile nawaomba ni kwamba madoa doa yale mulionayo hapa muweze kuondoa…’
Linturi issued a personal apology, saying his remarks were misunderstood and that he was wooing UDA supporters for full support in the August polls, “oblivious of the possibility that my choice of words might assume negative meaning.”
