Allan Makana, the man who caused a stir at the Parliament Buildings during the viewing of the late Mwai Kibaki’s body showed up again during the State Funeral of the former head of state.
Makana briefly interrupted the funeral proceeding that was going on at the Nyayo stadium moments after president Uhuru Kenyatta had finished delivering his speech.
The young man allegedly from Bungoma county went to the podium to ask Archbishop Anthony Muheria of the Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Nyeri, who was presiding over the ceremony, to grant him a few minutes so that he could make his comments.
“Allow me just two minutes to make a few remarks,” Makana told Bishop Muheria as the security guards dashed to whisk him away.
Muheria however stopped the guards and embraced Makana to calm him down as he led him away from the podium.
“”He is a Kenyan and a son of our nation. He is emotional at the loss of our President. Treat him well,” Muheria said as he proceeded with the programme. Makana was taken away by detectives.
Man almost disrupts Mwai Kibaki’s state funeral moments after President Uhuru Kenyatta delivered his speech.
He is the same person who stripped and cried on Tuesday while waiting to view the body of the former president outside Parliament #FarewellKibaki pic.twitter.com/MWGU16Rvyf
— Citizen TV Kenya (@citizentvkenya) April 29, 2022
On Tuesday this week, Makana caused drama in parliament when he showed up wailing and mourning the death of Kibaki while pleading to be allowed to view his body.
He was so emotional that he ended up removing some of his clothes. Makana said that he was a distant grandchild of Kibaki.
“Give me a chance to cry please, why are you allowing him to go soon, he is my president please, he is my president in fact he has been my distant [grandfather], I have been living with that mentality, why go soon, why,” he wailed.
Makana said he is distantly related to Kibaki because of his resemblance to him and he even has a bald head to prove his allegations.
“People used to call me ‘Kibaki’. From the time I came to Nairobi in 2016 till now, people still call me ‘Kibaki’ (mjukuu wa Kibaki),” he alleged.
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