Nakuru County politician Abdul Noor has revealed the process it took one before attending the Building Bridges Initiative (BBI) taskforce sittings.
Formed by President Uhuru Kenyatta and ODM boss Raila Odinga after their March 2018 truce, the 14-member team was dispatched to collect Kenyans' views on matters national healing and solutions to recurrent political wrangles.
However, Noor, a former Flamingo Ward Representative in Nakuru East sub-county says that the exercise was largely exclusive.
He cited that he was among one of the people who were blocked from attending the sittings in Nakuru because he did not have an invitation card.
He claimed that Nakuru Governor Lee Kinyanjui was almost locked out for failing to show his invitation card.
"When they came to a local hotel, among the people who attended was our governor but there was some trouble when he failed to produce his invitation card. We too tried in futility because we didn't have them," said Noor.
He made the remarks on Radio Sauti Ya Mwananchi's Nyuma Ya Pazia on Friday night.
He faulted the taskforce saying it was not inclusive as was expected.
"They should have gone to the common Kenyans as they will claim that their proposals are derived from them," he added.
While both Uhuru and Raila have assured Kenyans of their support for the task force and its final report, Raila has predicted that it is likely to propose constitutional changes.