Lawyer Miguna Miguna now says Kenya has no opposition leaders.
In an interview with The Newsmakers on Thursday, Miguna, who was forcefully deported to Canada for the second time, said that the National Super Alliance (Nasa) died after Raila Odinga shook hands with President Uhuru Kenyatta.
Miguna said Nasa co-principals Odinga, Kalonzo Musyoka, Moses Wetangula and Musalia Mudavadi are no longer reading from the same script after the deal between the former prime minister and President Kenyatta.
“There is nothing called the opposition as such in Kenya today because Nasa is completely divided. The so-called three principals (Kalonzo, Wetangula, and Mudavadi) are no longer reading from the same script as Odinga, so there is nothing called Nasa as we speak,” Miguna said.
The outspoken lawyer also accused Odinga of “going to bed with tyrants who stole elections and killed more than 400 people."
In a joint statement, President Kenyatta and Odinga promised to work together to halt the country’s descent into the abyss following a divisive 2017 General Election.
They expressed their desire to aside their differences and reconstruct a nation that is responsive to the urgent need for prosperity, fairness, and dignity for all Kenyans.
Kalonzo, Wetangula, and Mudavadi said they were not aware of the deal between Odinga and the president which was made public on March 9 at Harambee House.
Miguna has since rubbished the unity deal, terming it a betrayal by Odinga to Kenyans who died as a result of police brutality after the disputed August 8 elections.