Naisula Lesuuda breaks into tears during Kindiki’s vetting in Parliament
Samburu West MP Naisula Lesuuda during the vetting of Cabinet Secretaries at the National Assembly on October 18, 2022.
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Samburu West MP Naisula Lesuuda on Tuesday broke into tears
during the vetting of Interior Cabinet Secretary nominee Kithure Kindiki at the
National Assembly.
Prof. Kindiki appeared before the 15-member Committee on
Appointments to be grilled for the post, during which the legislator questioned
his plan to end insecurity in the troubled Northern Kenya region.
“I constantly get the feeling that office holders
responsible for matters of security don’t really, and are not willing to,
comprehend the pain and loss caused by insecurity in the North. Cattle rustling
is seen as a tradition and the people’s backward culture. Kindly let me put
this into context, and I pray for God’s strength as I do this,” Ms Lesuuda
began.
The MP revealed how on Monday, as she was going about the
vetting exercise, she got a call informing her that criminals from Samburu West
Constituency’s neighbour, Tiaty, ambushed herders, injuring one person and
driving away with cattle.
“This morning, they attacked again and as we speak they have
killed one person, two are missing, one of whom is my staff, and they have
stolen goods,” Lesuuda told the House.
“On a normal day as a leader, I would have dropped
everything, including this assignment, and rushed to my constituency to
condole, bury and have local security meetings. Then back to Nairobi, get an
OP, a chopper, we go to security meetings, and then come back to Nairobi. Calm
is restored, then retaliation attacks, most likely from my community, will take
place, and the cycle continues,” she added.
Terming the picture she had painted “the daily life of a
typical pastoralist”, Lesuuda questioned Kindiki over the government’s
perceived indifference to insecurity in the North.
“The only time as a country we behave shocked or surprised
is when we lose our security personnel, and only when we lose more than two or
three lives. When will one life be too much to lose in the northern parts of
this country?” the legislator posed.
She then further took the House back to the gruesome 2012
banditry incident which left 42 police officers dead in Suguta Valley, Baragoi.
“The only thing we have to show in Baragoi is a monument
with the names of these fallen heroes,” she said.
“As a leader I don’t run away from my responsibilities and
have been consistent and diligent but I am tired. I am honestly tired, and
Kenyans are tired. What do you intend to do differently from your predecessors,
away from the usual rhetoric and threats?” she posed before breaking down.
Lesuuda asked Prof. Kindiki’s plan in addressing insecurity
saying, “Perhaps you need to come and live in Kurkur, Pura, Longewan and Losuk,
incognito for only one week. What is your strategy or what are your thoughts to
end this menace once and for all so that as a leader I can execute my duties
and not concern myself with only matters of security?”
Prof. Kindiki on his part acknowledged the region’s security
crisis and termed lack of “operational capabilities” as one of the main
challenges facing security personnel in the area.
“I won't share operational issues but lack of operational
capabilities for our officers serving there is a problem, we need air and land
mobility. We need to energise community policing in these regions for them to
help officers to track criminals,” said Kindiki.
The CS nominee said he is determined to address the
challenge through whatever sacrifices need to be made, noting that one of his
main priorities was to weed out bandits.
“I am making whatever sacrifices that need to be made even if it means coming to live there. When bandits don't fear the government, that culture permits it and challenges the legitimacy of the government. My number one assignment is to free this country from such criminal elements,” said the CS nominee.
“We will follow the law, respect the constitution,
international human rights and treaties but we will still do the job,
ruthlessness with criminals is matched with respect to human rights. We will do
to criminals what needs to be done to them but, within the law,” added Kindiki.


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