Celebrated economist David Ndii has sensationally claimed that President Uhuru Kenyatta's fight against corruption is a mere threat, adding that he's also an accomplice in the vice.

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On Thursday at Windhoek, Uhuru fired shots at his close political allies, friends and family, adding that he will not spare any of both in his quest to leave behind a good legacy.

But Ndii, a former strategist with NASA, claims Uhuru was recently threatened by his deputy William Ruto at Sagana State Lodge, adding that he's likely to do nothing tangible in the fight against graft.

"Jubilee corruption is a joint criminal enterprise. Uhuru ups rhetoric, Ruto threatens to pull the pin. Ruto,Rotich cornered him in Sagana the other day, read him riot act mundu kho mundu but he has to go to all the way to Windhoek to shake fists at Ruto, then chicken out? Coward," claimed Ndii in a response to Leon Lidigu's tweet.

In a tweet on his Twitter handle which has since been suspended, Uhuru on Thursday vowed to fight his close allies reportedly hiding in their communities to frustrate his efforts. DP Ruto has been often dragged into corruption scandals.

"If you are corrupt we will fight you. You can be my brother or my sister or my closest political ally but if you are corrupt we will fight you. I won't be clouded by ethnicity or status in my quest to leave behind a united nation and I will continue championing for Kenya's unity," said Uhuru.

And with the tweet causing mixed reactions, Uhuru's handle was deactivated raising eyebrows. But State House has since claimed that all accounts of the president were hacked by unknown persons.

"On account of unauthorized access to the official social media handles of H.E the President of the Republic of Kenya, Uhuru Kenyatta .All official social media handles for the President have been temporarily suspended to allow for the necessary remedial measures to be undertaken," Chief of Staff Nzioka Waita said. 

While Uhuru has been backing the graft war, DP Ruto has openly dismissed the efforts as political witch-hunt, a move that could have irked the president during his Namibia trip.