National Resistance Movement (NRM) Kenya leader Dr Miguna Miguna has asked President Uhuru Kenyatta to apologise to him personally for violating his citizenship rights.
Miguna, in a tweet from Toronto Canada, said Uhuru's apology message to the country did not come in good faith and may never achieve the intended goal.
The former adviser to the Prime Minister said unless Uhuru makes an apology directly to him, then his message may just fade without positive impact.
"I was born in Kenya. My ancestors were born and buried in Kenya and Southern Sudan," Miguna said.
"Yet Uhuru Kenyatta hasn't apologised to me for violating my citizenship and vandalising my body, passport, and house. He hasn't obeyed court orders, returned me and paid restitution for the barbarism!" added Miguna.
Miguna was deported to Canada on March 27 after he refused to apply for citizenship afresh as asked by officials from the Immigration Department at the Jomo Kenyatta International Airport in Nairobi.
He had landed in the country after the High Court ordered for his return following his earlier deportation to Canada where he holds his other citizenship.
There was drama at the JKIA when he resisted deportation as he wrestled General Service Unit officers who wanted to force him into a Dubai-bound Emirates plane.