Ekuru Aukot slammed leaders who talk bad about the government only after losing their jobs. The Thirdway Alliance boss said these people kept quiet when they had power but spoke up after being fired. He called our government a group of criminals and said fired officials were part of the problem all along.
Aukot told Citizen TV how leadership faces big problems these days. He asked who Kenyans should believe anymore when people change their stories based on whether they work for the government. He said Kenya has officials who hide the truth until someone kicks them out. According to him, these former leaders act like frauds who stay silent when it helps them personally.
He believes these fired bigwigs need to say sorry to regular Kenyans before they start attacking the same system they once served. His comments came after former Deputy President Gachagua and ex-Cabinet Secretary Muturi made big claims about corruption. Since his removal last October, Gachagua has kept attacking President Ruto, calling him the head of all corruption schemes.
Their fight grew worse when Ruto claimed Gachagua wanted ten billion shillings just to help the President win support from Mt. Kenya voters. Gachagua denied these claims completely during his Monday KTN interview. He said if he really blackmailed the President, that would have been the first reason listed for removing him from office last year.
Muturi also shared his troubles with NTV viewers. The former Cabinet Secretary said Ruto pushed him to approve a huge tree-planting deal worth 129 billion shillings with Russian businesspeople. Muturi explained he refused because such money must go through proper Treasury channels first. Both men represent a growing trend of officials speaking against Ruto only after losing their positions in government.
Aukot told Citizen TV how leadership faces big problems these days. He asked who Kenyans should believe anymore when people change their stories based on whether they work for the government. He said Kenya has officials who hide the truth until someone kicks them out. According to him, these former leaders act like frauds who stay silent when it helps them personally.
He believes these fired bigwigs need to say sorry to regular Kenyans before they start attacking the same system they once served. His comments came after former Deputy President Gachagua and ex-Cabinet Secretary Muturi made big claims about corruption. Since his removal last October, Gachagua has kept attacking President Ruto, calling him the head of all corruption schemes.
Their fight grew worse when Ruto claimed Gachagua wanted ten billion shillings just to help the President win support from Mt. Kenya voters. Gachagua denied these claims completely during his Monday KTN interview. He said if he really blackmailed the President, that would have been the first reason listed for removing him from office last year.
Muturi also shared his troubles with NTV viewers. The former Cabinet Secretary said Ruto pushed him to approve a huge tree-planting deal worth 129 billion shillings with Russian businesspeople. Muturi explained he refused because such money must go through proper Treasury channels first. Both men represent a growing trend of officials speaking against Ruto only after losing their positions in government.