In a move that underscores a terminal lack of faith in the national security apparatus, Vihiga Senator Godfrey Osotsi has officially recorded a statement at the Bunge Police Station, seeking the “legislative sanctuary” of Parliament after a brutal ambush in Kisumu.
The filing marks a chilling escalation in the aftermath of the West End Mall attack, where the Senator was targeted by a coordinated militia. By choosing to record his statement at the high-security Bunge precinct rather than a regular station, Osotsi is signaling a “Total Breach of Trust” between opposition lawmakers and the executive-controlled police force.
The “twisted” reality surfacing from this filing is the allegation of a “Tactical Stand-Down.” Osotsi’s testimony suggests that the Kisumu attackers did not merely breach security; they operated with a degree of “permissive immunity” that saw local law enforcement vanish the moment the first blow was struck. This wasn’t a random act of street violence; it was a “precision silencing” that occurred in a high-surveillance zone, yet resulted in zero immediate arrests.
“Recording a statement at Bunge is a symbolic act of exile,” a senior political strategist noted. “It tells the country that a Senator no longer feels safe within the standard police infrastructure. We are witnessing the birth of a ‘Two-Tier’ security reality: the streets for the goons, and the barbed wire of Parliament for the leaders.”
The DCI is now under immense pressure to explain how a “hired hand” can bypass state protection in broad daylight. Osotsi’s dossier reportedly identifies several “political financiers” who allegedly greenlit the Kisumu hit. As the file moves toward the Director of Public Prosecutions, the message from the Bunge gates is devastating: in modern Kenya, your constitutional status is no shield against a state-sanctioned shadow.















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