PS Omollo: Opponents of NADCo implementation are enemies of Kenyans
By People Daily Digital Reporter, February 7, 2026Interior Principal Secretary Raymond Omollo has castigated leaders who are against the implementation of the National Dialogue Committee (NADCO) report, calling them enemies of Kenyans.
While speaking at a funeral in Homa Bay County, PS Omollo said that it beats logic for someone to oppose an agenda that seeks to address critical challenges the nation has faced,, such as corruption and human rights injustices, among other issues, in the 10-point agenda.

“It beats me at some point that when the NADCO Committee is following up on some of these issues,…but then there are some Kenyans who don’t think this is supposed to happen, and they’ve gone to court, and now compensation cannot happen,” he exclaimed.
The interior PS said that the President, under the broad-based government arrangement, is fully committed to seeing full implementation of the NADCO, were it not for the court hurdles and opposition from some quarters.
“Under the broad-based arrangement, we have every intention to implement the 10-point agenda,” he said.
He reiterated the government’s commitment towards ensuring victims of police brutality and human rights abuses are duly compensated despitethe headwinds the government has faced through court injunctions.
The 10-point agenda committee chairperson, Dr Agnes Zani, and the ODM Director of Communication, who also spoke at the funeral, emphasised the importance of not politicising the report’s implementation, as it forms part of a blueprint that will save Kenya from plunging into turmoil.
Sifuna’s reservations with NADCO

This comes after Orange Democratic Movement (ODM) Secretary General Edwin Sifuna sharply criticised the Committee on the Implementation of the Ten-Point Agenda and the National Dialogue Committee Report (COIN-10), accusing it of failing to deliver any tangible results nearly a year after its formation.
Speaking during an interview with a local media station on Tuesday, February 3, 2026, the outspoken Nairobi senator came down hard on the five-member committee chaired by Agnes Zani, saying it has made no meaningful progress despite having adequate time to act.
Sifuna revealed that in June 2025, he publicly challenged the committee to stop what he termed as ‘laxity’ and get to work. However, he said he was advised by former Prime Minister Raila Odinga to ease off and give the team an additional six months to implement the report.