How Raila is invading university leadership to achieve his call for referendum

Referendum is inevitable. It is just a stone throw away. Sooner than the country expects we will be lining up to cast out votes whether in support or in disagreement.

Opposition leader Raila Odinga yesterday met students’ leaders from various universities and promised to push for key law reforms this year.

During the meeting at his Capital Hill office, Nairobi, the Orange Democratic Movement (ODM) party leader rallied university students to support for the push for changes in the constitution and vowed to ensure that proposed changes on governance sail through this year.

“This will be the year of change for this country,” said Raila, who is also African Union’s Special Envoy for Infrastructure.

He told off those opposing calls for a review of the constitution saying the train of change had long left the station and would not be stopped.

“You make a choice to be with us or not. Nobody will stop the change that is coming,” said Raila.

Later, the ODM leader said he discussed the Building Bridges Initiative with the student leaders who promised to be its flag-bearers.

The initiative came up following President Uhuru Kenyatta and Raila’s March 9, 2018 truce, its team tasked to collect public views on various reforms to unite the country and end a cycle of electoral violence and destructive politics of exclusion.

“They (student leaders) expressed support of the Building Bridges Initiative. They represent different shades of opinion, but united in the good of the country,” observed Raila.

The entry of student leaders into the push for constitutional change is a boost to Raila who has been advocating for an all-inclusive government that bolsters unity.

The Kenya University Students Organisation (KUSO) chairperson Anthony Manyara called for greater inclusion of students in the national agenda.

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