‘Wait for 2027 to elect who you want’: MP Mohamed Ali tells off youth over anti-gov’t demos
Nyali Member of Parliament Mohamed Ali has
told Kenyan youth to stop the nationwide anti-government protests over what he describes
as a risk of destabilising the country.
The protests, which initially began last
month to pressure legislators to shoot down the unpopular Finance Bill, 2024 have since morphed into resistance against President William Ruto’s entire
administration.
After Ruto announced last week that he
would not assent to the Bill, the youth have been running campaigns online and on
the streets, calling for his resignation.
They accuse the Kenya Kwanza administration
of incompetence, neglecting its citizens, corruption and a waste of public
resources.
But the Nyali MP, who belongs to Ruto’s
United Democratic Alliance (UDA) party, says the demonstrations – which entered
their third week on Tuesday – have posed serious economic consequences to the
country and risk running it into instability.
“You have no idea what an unstable country
looks like; ask me, I have been to several countries which have been
destabilised by dirty politics; South Sudan, Somalia, Sudan and Rwanda,” Ali
said on Wednesday during a meeting of UDA legislators and religious leaders in
Mombasa.
“They were all good countries that were
ruined by the youth through dirty politics and tribalism. Let us not waste our
country because of the interests of some people.”
Ali claimed the ongoing protests are backed
by unnamed persons with ulterior motives and urged the youth to stop them.
“This is not about the Finance Bill; it was
not about it. It is about something else and people are taking advantage of
that to destabilise our country,” said the MP.
In his view, Kenyans should give President
Ruto’s administration space to lead and wait for the next General Election in
2027 to elect whoever they want.
“People have the power to elect whoever
they want in 2027. For now, let us allow President William Ruto to put his
house in order. He has rejected the Bill and offered to have a discussion,” Ali
said.
He told the youth to “give the police peace
of mind”.
“I will also go around the county preaching
peace; I don’t care if I will be hit or not,” said the MP, whose office protesters
stormed on June 24 over his absence at the National Assembly when his
counterparts were voting for the contentious draft law.
Ali, himself a former investigative
journalist, further blamed the media for covering the protests, terming it
diminishing to the country.
“Stop participating in activities that will
ruin this country. Learn to discern what to broadcast and what to censor,” he
said.
As of Monday, 39 people had been killed since
the anti-government demonstrations began on June 18, according to the Kenya
National Commission on Human Rights, which noted 361 injuries, 32 cases of
"enforced or involuntary disappearances" and 627 arrests of
protesters.
In Tuesday’s demos, however, there are claims
that hired goons infiltrated the largely peaceful protests to disrupt, loot and
plunder.
Youth groups were seen charging at police with
stones, breaking into premises and burning others in several parts of the
country.
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