Former Vice President Kalonzo Musyoka's Wiper Party has strongly condemned the Kikuyu song 'Ikamba' allegedly insulting and mocking Kamba community.
Wiper Party Executive Director Gerald Maaka on Tuesday condemned the song, calling for arrest and prosecution of the artists who authored it.
Maaka said that the song is in bad faith and meant to create animosity between the Kikuyu and the Kamba communities.
He said that the song is insentive with intension of causing war between the two communities.
Maaka said that Wiper will seek legal redress should relevant government agencies fail to apprehend and prosecute the artists.
"It is ethically wrong, morally wrong and insentive for individuals to openly perpetuate hate and incitement in the name of singing," he said.
Maaka called on the police and the National Cohesion and Integration Commission (NCIC) to summon and take action against the artists.
The Wiper Party Executive director said that as a party they will stand with Kitui governor Charity Ngilu who has been under attack for enforcing charcoal ban.
He said that Ngilu's charcoal ban is what made the artiste to author the mockery 'Ikamba' song.
The controversial song continues to illicit sharp criticism with leaders demanding for action.
On Monday, Makueni senator Mutula Kilonzo Junior wrote to NCIC and the Office of the Director of Public Prosecutions demanding for action.
In what has been interpreted as mockery, the 'Ikamba' song starts with the artists eating mangoes from Ukambani.
The artists in the song question what members of the Kamba community will feed on once the mango season comes to an end.
The artists answer the question by stating that Kamba's will feed on dogs once the mango season is over.
The duo further mock Ngilu for imposing the ban on charcoal burning in Kitui by showing footage of a lorry which was allegedly torched by locals in the county three weeks ago.
NCIC boss Francis Ole Kaparo says the commsion investigators are reviewing the song for action.
The Kenya Film Classification Board has already banned the controversial song.