NASA co-principals Moses Wetangula and Musalia Mudavadi should leave opposition leader Raila Odinga alone and mind their own business, ODM's Busia Governor Sospeter Ojaamong has said.

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Ojaamong indicated the two leaders should wait for their time since Uhuru and Raila are now working together following the symbolic 'golden' handshake on March 9, which created cracks in the opposition coalition. 

"The president's agenda is affordable health care, housing and food security. These are what we should embrace to benefit our people," the two-time governor said on Monday.

In a statement, Ojaamong said much time was wasted on politics and election petitions that Kenyan leaders now need to focus on development in the next five years and forge a united and peaceful country.

Ojaamong who strongly supports his party leader, Odinga, supported Devolution Cabinet Secretary Eugene Wamalwa's call for unity in Western Kenya aimed at bringing all communities together instead of alienating others.

"Time for tribal parties is long gone. What we want is politics of unity and development, thus the need by the two leaders to join hands with the President and Raila to forge a united and peaceful country," concluded part of his statement.

Mudavadi and Wetangula vowed to lock Odinga out of Western Kenya saying he betrayed NASA coalition and the people of Luhya community after meeting Uhuru without consulting them and Kalonzo Musyoka as NASA co-leaders.