Matiang’i faults NIS, says ‘it’s their responsibility to know’ after goons hired during protests
Former Interior Cabinet Secretary Fred Matiang'i. PHOTO/Courtesy
Audio By Vocalize
Former Interior Cabinet Secretary Dr. Fred Matiang’i has questioned the efficiency of the National Intelligence Service (NIS) in light of claims that goons were hired to infiltrate recent anti-government protests, saying the agency should have known and acted before chaos unfolded.
Matiang’i, who spoke during an exclusive interview with Citizen TV Tuesday
night, took a swipe at state security organs, noting that it is their
constitutional responsibility to prevent such breaches before they happen.
He singled out the state intelligence NIS, asserting that it
was sophisticated enough to detect such activities well in advance and ensure
they are prevented.
“You know, the way the National Intelligence Service (NIS)
works, I can’t drive with guns from Kisii to Nairobi in my car or have people
bringing guns to me, and the NIS does not know. It’s their responsibility to
know that the way this fellow is behaving, he normally has night meetings with
people and he’s recruiting goons,” he said.
“I cannot imagine that the security infrastructure does not
know that somebody is hiring or training goons to bring them to town to cause mayhem.
I cannot imagine that that’s the case, and if they have the information, then
they should go forward and act.”
The former CS, who oversaw internal security for years under
President Uhuru Kenyatta’s administration, noted that NIS has both the tools
and legal mandate to track such operations, further revealing that the agency has
access to private communications and can tap mobile communications.
“I don’t want to pretend, I know for sure that the NIS
listens to our phone calls, they have ways of collecting intelligence. If they
know that somebody is recruiting goons from Roysambu to bring them to Nairobi,
why wait until the goons get to Nairobi?” He said.
The 2027 presidential hopeful criticised public officials
who have made allegations about paid goons yet hold access to state
intelligence and security capabilities.
“What I find very interesting is that allegations are being
made by public officials, yet they’re the custodians of information because
they’re the ones who have the instruments of power and the capacity to find out
who is doing what.”
Despite the threats, no leader or alleged sponsor has been arrested.


Leave a Comment