Kimilili Member of Parliament Didmus Barasa now claims that the government has embarked on eating its own people.
This comes amid complains from some politicians initially considered insiders of the nation's top leadership, but who are now crying foul, citing mistreatment from state agencies.
Such include Kiharu lawmaker Ndindi Nyoro who spent Monday night in police custody over allegations of assaulting a police officer during a church scuffle on Sunday.
In a tweet Tuesday, Barasa observed that the government has turned against its own people, but noted that its at the same the tight time for the parliament to deal with the persons though to be promoting the impunity.
He tagged the Directorate of Criminal Investigations (DCI) which has been accused of being used by top officials from the Interior Ministry to harass politicians supporting Deputy President William Ruto in Mt Kenya.
"As Government begins to eat its own people,time has come for Parliament to begin eating perpetrators of impunity @kipmurkomen @DCI_Kenya @DPPS_KE @NAssemblyKE @Senate_KE @NationBreaking @StandardKenya @STAR #ReleaseNdindiNyoro @Aaroncheruiyot @HonKipchumba @IG_NPS @WilliamsRuto," he tweeted.
Speaking on NTV on Monday morning, Kandara MP Alice Wahome claimed that Interior Principal Secretary Karanja Kibicho held a meeting in Muranga some weeks ago, where it was agreed that her and Nyoro be cut to size.
Adressing the press before his arrest on Monday, Nyoro too warned Kibicho and his Cabinet Secretary Fred Matiangi against misusing the power bestowed to them by President Uhuru Kenyatta.
The latest happenings have revived a 2018 warning from Siaya Senator James Orengo against government diehards who were mocking suffering opposition supporters then.
In his popular statement, Orengo said that governments eat their own people, and it would punish its insiders more than it would punish him, an opposition sympathizer.