County Officials Questioned in Nairobi Garbage Dump Incident

The police asked questions of many people who work for Nairobi County. These people threw trash at the Kenya Power offices in Nairobi. Mr. Murkomen, who helps run the country, said the police took eight trucks that carried the garbage.

"Governments should not act this way. What happened was wrong. We will punish the people who planned this," Mr. Murkomen said. He told everyone the police did their job well and acted fast when they heard about the problem.

Mr. Murkomen talked at the police building. Other important police leaders stood next to him. He said throwing trash at offices was bad, and people could become sick. "Throwing waste makes people catch diseases like cholera. This action was very bad," he said.

The police started looking for answers right away. Not many people knew what the police did, which made lawmakers very angry at a big meeting on Wednesday. Mr. Ichung'wah and other lawmakers wanted to know why nobody stopped the trash-throwers.

Mr. Wetang'ula, who leads the meetings, told the police boss to come next week and explain everything. Mr. Murkomen promised he would write down all the facts and send them to the lawmakers. "We did not share this information during yesterday's talk, but we will send a full report to Parliament," Mr. Murkomen said.

Another office asked the police to study what happened. They want a report in seven days explaining why people fought over this. On Wednesday, Mr. Wandayi and Mr. Koskei met. They helped make peace between the two groups that were fighting.
 

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