Prime Cabinet Secretary Musalia Mudavadi has now urged the Azimio la Umoja One Kenya coalition party to quit harassing and taunting the administration of President William Ruto.

Mudavadi remarked at a question-and-answer session in the National Assembly on Wednesday, just hours after chaos broke out at the former President Uhuru Kenyatta-led Jubilee Party headquarters in a long-running leadership conflict between two groups.

In his inquiry to Mudavadi, National Assembly Majority Leader Kimani Ichung'wah, he was said that Uhuru was accompanied by a band of unruly teenagers who instigated the commotion.

As a result, he wanted to know what steps the government was putting in place to cope with such allegedly rowdy and dangerous groups.


"This afternoon, we saw the former President lead a gang to take over an office, and where I come from, Mungiki has always been a huge disturbance, and when we see Mungiki thriving, we get concerned," Ichung'wah said.

Mudavadi insisted on the rule of law in his response, adding that the government is prepared to situate that everyone in Kenya follows the law to the letter.

"If there are people walking the streets with Mungiki and weapons, surely those people are not enticing foreign direct investment, let alone local investment; we have to run away from those awkward practices and move ahead to get the country back on its feet," he remarked.

Mudavadi stressed that President Ruto's government is legitimately in place, denying any possibility of the opposition team running for president again before the 2027 elections.

"We don't mean to be vindictive, but provocation must also be avoided," he stated.


Mudavadi bemoaned the opposition-called protests, claiming that they were destroying property and frightening away potential investors and efforts to rebuild the economy.

"Let us resist the temptation to imagine that we can have elements who want to provoke the government in order to be seen as infective or vindictive; that is not our