Suba North lawmaker Milly Odhiambo has been the latest political leader to speak on the Sunday church clash between Kiharu MP Ndindi Nyoro and nominated MP Maina Kamanda.
The two have remained on the public limelight after the fight which was triggered by the disagreement on who was to take charge of the function which was happening in Kiharu.
The aftermath has been the arrest and later release of Nyoro, and condemnations on him for causing chaos while other politicians have questioned why Kamanda remains untouched.
While the Catholic Diocese of Muranga has since banned politicians from its pulpits, the vocal lawmaker says that the church should not lament as its part of the problem, and has been encouraging politicians to come on board.
Speaking on Tuesday, the lawmaker said that similarly, the church should be the one to put the house back in order and not airing complains.
"The church should not lament; it has encouraged this kind of behaviour from politicians and it is up to it to put the house back in order. Politicians do not force themselves to speak," she said on Citizen TV's Daybreak show.
On her side, former Nyeri Woman Representative Priscilla Nyokabi said that this makes it even more necessary to amend the law and forbid politicians from participating in harambees.
She added that the fight added to claims that fundraisers are being done using corruption money is reason enough to tame politicians' participation in charitable events.
"The question we need to get back to is whether leaders should be participating in Harambees; that is where the law ought to go…that there should not be campaigning in between the electoral cycle. Harambees are related to corruption and many other things," she said.