Baringo Senator Gideon Moi yesterday said Rift Valley people
no longer trust Deputy President William Ruto and President Uhuru Kenyatta
should now deal with them directly.
In an exclusive interview with the Star, the Kanu chairman
said Ruto no longer commands the respect and support of many people in the
region, especially the Kalenjin "who find him arrogant and
condescending".
The Rift Valley has long been considered Ruto's turf but his
support is no longer rock solid. He and Moi are engaged in a supremacy battle
to control the vote bloc. Both have declared they will run for President in
2022.
Moi said Ruto has created many enemies and pushed away many
people who supported Jubilee in the last election.
"If the President wants votes from this region, he
should come to the people directly himself," he advised.
The senator spoke on the same day Uhuru and Ruto toured the
North Rift region of Nandi where they launched development projects and
denounced critics.
"Ignore those people who come here to tell you we have
done nothing. Stay in Jubilee for development," Ruto said at in Kaptembo
in Nandi, where he toured with the President.
Moi said the fact that Ruto's aide Farouk Kibet and close
ally Senator Kipchumba Murkomen have been linked to the NYS scandal was reason
enough for Uhuru to be worried. The allegations have caused disquiet in the
region, he said.
While Ruto has at times dismissed Moi as a joke, the Kanu
leader has been slowly but steadily eroding Ruto's support in the populous
South Rift Kalenjin region. This is especially so in Kericho and Bomet where
the senator is working with Governor Isaac Ruto who heads the CCM party.
The Baringo lawmaker predictablyenjoys the most support in
his own county and neighbouring West Pokot.
During the Kericho Senate by-elections in February this
year, Kanu came a close second and has since popularised itself in the region,
promising a clean sweep there next year.
Two weeks ago Ruto was booed in Nandi where he was
inspecting development projects.
Yesterday Moi asked Ruto to stop insulting him and his
father, retired President Daniel Moi, and instead respond to real issues about
his leadership style.
"He should make a public apology," the senator
said.
Kanu secretary general Nick Salat joined the attack
yesterday, accusing Ruto of disrespecting other elected Rift leaders.
"What Ruto is doing is unacceptable and we will not
allow that to continue. We are telling the President to take note that his
deputy is fast losing his popularity and will not be able to marshal the votes
he did in the last election," Salat told the Star on the phone.
Meanwhile, President Kenyatta told Nandi residents the
Jubilee government's infrastructure projects and other developments will not be
slowed by the opposition's noise.
The President told off the opposition over claims his
administration has done little in development, saying the country has witnessed
more development projects in the last three years than at any other time in its
history.
While our opponents are devoting all their energies to how
to share political positions, our focus has all a long been on implementing
projects including infrastructure, health, energy, agriculture and education
because our main aim is to lift the lives of Kenyans,†he
said.
Uhuru launched tarmacking of key roads to link Nandi, Uasin
Gishu and Kakamega counties.
He flagged off upgrading of the Kaptembo - Rivatex road and
the Kaiboi-Kipkaren River Junction roads at Kaptembo in Nandi. The two will
cost Sh3.7 billion.
The President also launched tarmacking of a road running
through Danger to Kimondi and Chemuswa.
He said the government intends to construct 200km tarmacked
roads in Nandi, compared to the 70km done since independence.
The administration is determined to construct tarmacked
roads countrywide to attract investors and create jobs for youth, Uhuru said.
Saying the time for empty talk and political rhetoric is
long gone, the President said Kenyans will vote for Jubilee because they have
witnessed concrete progress everywhere.
He called "baseless lies" the opposition's
assertions that the Kenya Cooperative Creameries has been sold.
Some people thrive on lies for political mileage but they
forget the truth has a way of always coming to the fore, Kenyatta said.
The government has allocated Sh500 million to KCC to ensure
dairy farmers are paid their dues, he said.Kenyatta said the Last Mile
electricity connectivity project has increased the number of Nandi households
connected to power from 16 per cent in 2013 to 32 per cent in 2016.
We have also set aside Sh1 billion to step up electricity
connections in Nandi county to reach the national average of 70 per cent,"
he said. The same is happening everywhere, the President said.
Even in Bondo, Raila Odinga neighbors are enjoying electricity connected
by the Jubilee government, he said.
DP Ruto defended Jubilee development record, saying Kenyans
will vote for it in the next election because of life is improving everywhere.
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