Please enable JavaScript to read this content.
ODM leader Raila Odinga and Mombasa Governor Hassan Joho stepped up criticism of Deputy President William Ruto, depicting him as one determined to buy his way to power. Raila claimed Ruto treats the poor the same way a hunter treats prey.
He said the DP expects payback for the donations and gifts he has been giving out lately. He argued that Ruto’s public displays of charity were designed to hypnotise the poor.
“It is like a trick you play on a chicken; you throw crumbs, it becomes dazed and you capture it. You do not fatten an animal because you love it. The chicken realises when it’s too late that all you intended was to turn it into the stew,” said Raila, in a poetic escalation of his tit-for-tat with the DP.
The two also claimed that the DP opposes the Building Bridges Initiative (BBI) because he prefers simplistic solutions that hypnotise the poor.
At the end of Raila’s four-day tour on Saturday evening, the former prime minister lashed out of those he claimed: “have poured money in churches to prove they are generous and God-fearing after plundering public resources”.
Joho added that Ruto’s claim that he speaks for the poor was false since he lives an opulent lifestyle. Joho also said one should be elected “on account of the vision they have” and not the mere claim that they were born poor.
“You will not be elected because you are telling people you were born poor or they are poor. You will be elected because of the vision you have,” Joho said in reference to the DP.
Speakers throughout Raila’s public events in Coast since Wednesday concentrated on deconstructing Ruto’s hustler narrative. When he toured Coast last week, Ruto and his new allies depicted him as a poor man’s advocate hamstrung by the so-called dynasties — a narrative that Raila and Joho spent considerable time attacking in their tours of Taita Taveta, Kwale and Mombasa counties.
Yesterday, Raila spent a quiet morning in private discussions at his Nyali residence and was expected to fly to Nairobi later. Joho led the charge on Saturday evening by declaring that Ruto ought to explain what he has done as deputy president to combat poverty since 2013.
Raila said the BBI was borne of the 2017 electoral crisis and realisation by President Uhuru Kenyatta and himself that Ken-yans desired reforms to make a clean break from its troubled post-independence history.
He claimed that while he and the president chose the path he said envisaged a total overhaul of governance, the DP had elected to use the money to entice Kenyans with simplistic solutions
“We are after a lasting solution to Kenya’s problems, not this politics of gifts and tokens,” said Raila, who further added that
“Kenyans do not seek for ready-made solutions because they want to partici-pate in finding the solution.”He said the BBI provides Kenyans with the opportunity to discuss Kenya’s problems and solutions.“It is not enough to dish out wheelbarrows, bicycles and water tanks and then believe this solves Kenya’s problems.
Stay informed. Subscribe to our newsletter
Kenyans want a comprehensive solution and this is the path we launched with President Kenyatta,” said Raila. He then declared that Ruto and his allies were trying to buy poor Kenyans with money, equating Ruto’s donation tac-tics to the behaviour of a hunt-er after prey.“When a hyena wants to capture prey it even changes its voice to sound harmless. All I can advise you is to beware of a hyena in sheep’s skin. You are better advised to keep your herds tightly secured,” he said.
Joho argued that Ruto’s lifestyle can’t be related to that of a hustler, who he claims to speak for. He claimed that Ruto flies private planes and travels in helicopters and also lives a multi-billion rural home.
“I want to warn Kenyans against the so-called hustler. When he came to Mombasa last week he flew in a private aeroplane and was picked from Moi International Airport by helicopter. They travelled in a huge convoy and all of you marvelled,” said Joho.