Canadian based fiery lawyer Miguna Miguna has set an array of demands President Uhuru Kenyatta and Opposition leader Raila Odinga must fulfil before convincing Kenyans into buying their Building Bridges Initiative (BBI) idea.

Is there a story unfolding in your community? Let Hivisasa know

Speaking during an interview on K24 TV's Punchline programme, Miguna continued to rubbish the Uhuru-Raila-led BBI initiative saying it has nothing new while terming it as 'hogwash'.

Miguna noted that he was being interviewed from Toronto, Canada "because the same people who want to bring unity have prevented me from coming back home. These people are playing games with Kenyans".

So, what does the sharp-shooting lawyer wants the duo to do before they can push the BBI agenda any further?

Here are three things that came out clearly in Miguna's Sunday interview with Anne Kiguta.

1. Observe the rule of law

Miguna was categorical that the BBI will be utter balderdash if Uhuru and his government continue to disregard the rule of law.

"Let them first implement the Constitution 100 per cent. Let them obey court orders. You cannot tell people BBI will solve their problems when you don't care about the rule of law and the people," said Miguna.

2. Clean up the entire system 

Miguna asserted that there is no referendum that is going to be 'credible and legitimate' when the IEBC has not been 'transformed' and Uhuru, Raila and even DP William Ruto exited the scene.

"We need to clean up the entire system and Ruto is part of that system. These are less than 500 people against 50 million. Kenyans are not from Jupiter, we have the same intellect like them. We have to remove these cabals," he said.

"Everywhere in the world, people have the power to chase the cabals out of town. If Ruto is a revolutionary, he should come out in the open and join me," he added.

3. Leave the process to be owned up by Kenyans themselves

On this, the self-styled general said: 

"If the process is not transparent, if the process is not owned by the people, then it cannot be legitimate. The people of Kenya are sovereign. They have the right to self-determine."