Opposition threatens nationwide protests in 2 weeks if Gachagua attackers not arrested
United Opposition after holding a closed-door meeting with Inspector General of Police Douglas Kanja on January 30, 2026. PHOTO | COURTESY
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The United Opposition has threatened to call nationwide
demonstrations within two weeks if authorities fail to arrest and prosecute
those behind the latest attack on former Deputy President Rigathi Gachagua at
ACK Witima Church in Othaya, Nyeri County.
The opposition leaders issued the warning on Friday after
holding a closed-door meeting with Inspector General of Police Douglas Kanja,
where they accused the government of supervising what they termed as recurrent,
targeted and coordinated acts of violence against their leaders and supporters.
After hours of engagement with the Inspector General, the
leaders emerged warning that they would resort to street action if no decisive
steps are taken.
“We have told the IG that before we come back on the 16th,
those members of that unit need to be arrested, disarmed and prosecuted. After
the 16th, hatutakuwa na lingine la kufanya ni kuitisha maandamano kwa Jamhuri
ya Kenya until Murkomen, Kanja, two IGs are removed from office,” said DCP
party leader Rigathi Gachagua.
Wiper Patriotic Front leader Kalonzo Musyoka warned that
continued attacks on opposition leaders could plunge the country into
instability.
“If you touch any national leader and assassinate one of our
national leaders before next year’s election, this country will never be the
same again,” Musyoka said.
People’s Liberation Party leader Martha Karua accused the
National Police Service (NPS) of engaging in political intimidation.
“We want the NPS to get out of goonism, to get out of dirty
political work and go back to their work,” Karua said.
The leaders also wrote a detailed letter to the National
Security Advisory Council, chaired by President William Ruto, enumerating 23
separate incidents in which Gachagua, his family, supporters and members of the
public were allegedly attacked between November 2024 and January 2026.
In the letter, the opposition expressed what they termed as
grave concern over persistent and increasingly violent attacks against Gachagua,
noting that several of the incidents occurred in the presence of police
officers and, in some cases, with alleged police facilitation.
Among the incidents listed is the January 25, 2026 attack at
ACK Witima Church in Othaya, where tear gas and live bullets were reportedly
used, vehicles were disabled and congregants were injured. The opposition
claims intelligence points to planning by a special police unit referred to as
“Sierra”.
The opposition named at least 15 individuals they accuse of
planning and executing the Witima attack, including Major Nicholas Mwachovi,
Cpl John Maina alias Birash, Cpl Vincent Maronga, Peter Matu, Owen Kagia, David
Ochieng, Erick Obiero, Jeff Mutwiri, Jackson Kioko, Kefa Okwoyo, Crispin
Walumbe Muthoni, Stephen Habire Chege, Peter Wainaina Kabuga, Ambrose Manyeki
Njeri alias Magrass and Simon Mwangi Wangari alias Sanchez.
The letter further details attacks in Limuru, Shamata, Nyeri,
Meru, Naivasha, Mai Mahiu, Kakamega, Bungoma, Murang’a, Narok, Nairobi and
Kirinyaga counties, some involving tear gas, live ammunition and alleged
assaults by police officers or police-backed groups.
The opposition told the council that Gachagua has reasonable
and well-founded cause to fear for his life, describing the Witima church
incident as bearing “all the hallmarks of a deliberate and coordinated
assassination attempt”.
Among the demands made to the National Security Advisory
Council are the institution of independent, impartial and comprehensive
investigations into all the incidents, suspension and prosecution of all
officers and civilians implicated, urgent measures to guarantee the safety of
Gachagua and the public, and restoration of public confidence in the national
security system through adherence to the Constitution and the rule of law.
“Kuna kikosi haramu ya polisi 12 inaitwa Nairobi Sierra ndiyo
walitumwa na William Ruto kuuwa sisi kanisani,” Gachagua claimed.
After the meeting, the leaders addressed a charged rally at
Wakulima Market in Nairobi, calling on Kenyans to be ready to turn up for
protests should their demands not be met.
“Tutaagiza maandamano kutoka Kisumu, Busia, Kakamega…,”
Gachagua said.
“Maandamano yatatoka Mandera hadi Kisumu. Wakimgusa mmoja wetu
Kenya haitakuwa Kenya tena,” Musyoka added.
DAP-K leader Eugene Wamalwa and DCP deputy party leader
Cleophas Malala echoed the call, warning that continued attacks would be met
with sustained resistance.
The opposition has also announced a series of “meet the
people” tours, with a church service scheduled for Sunday in Nyeri County, as
pressure mounts on the government and security agencies over the handling of
the alleged attacks.


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