Wiper Party leader Kalonzo Musyoka during NASANASA's peoples' assembly convention in Machakos on Friday. He has denied claims of being friendly to Jubilee. (Photo/Kalonzo Musyoka/facebook)Wiper Party leader Kalonzo Musyoka has rubbished claims that he is friendly to Jubilee government by pushing for dialogue.Speaking at Wiper Party offices when he handed by-election nomination certificate to Edith Nyenze on Saturday, Kalonzo said that his push for dialogue does not in any way make him friendly to Jubilee.He said that dialogue is part of NASA's wider electoral reforms agenda.The NASA deputy leader indicated that he is focused on their planned swearing-in stating that the 'window' for dialogue with Jubilee closed a long time ago."I am not friendly to Jubilee as being speculated and people should stop equating my push for dialogue to mean that I sympathize with Jubilee," he said on Saturday at Wiper party offices in Lavington, Nairobi.Kalonzo further rubbished media claims that he is secretly working with Jubilee.
The former Vice President said that he will not listen to propagandists who he claimed want to frustrate their planned swearing in.He said that there is nothing that is going to stop their oath-taking on January 30.The Wiper party leader said that power belongs to the people and that Jubilee should be ready to dance to people's power tune.There have been claims that Kalonzo could be working with Jubilee secretly even as the opposition pushes for their swearing in.Kalonzo has been calling for dialogue with Jubilee on electoral reforms a move that has been interpreted as not being committed to their swearing-in slated for January 30.The former VP was allegedly booed on Friday during NASA's people's assembly convention in Machakos.NASA has insisted on swearing in Raila and Kalonzo as the people's president and deputy respectively even as the government terms the planned exercise illegal and highly treasonous. Raila alongside other principals will converge in Mombasa on Sunday (today) for the Coast people's assembly convention ahead of their January 30 swearing-in.