Speaking in Mkomani Mombasa County during the NYOTA fund disbursement Ruto accused rival politicians of seeking power through unrest rather than service.
He claimed some leaders were recruiting young people to cause chaos destroy property and hurt the economy. Ruto warned that such actions would scare investors disrupt businesses and slow growth at a time when many families are struggling.
The President said the opposition has no clear development plan for unemployed youth. He challenged them to explain how they would create jobs boost incomes and grow the nation instead of focusing on political fights.
According to Ruto the main agenda of his critics is removing him from office. He argued that slogans and threats do not solve high living costs job shortages or the needs of ordinary Kenyans.
He insisted young voters are smart and cannot be misled easily. Ruto said the youth want real answers on work training and opportunity not endless political noise and street drama.
His remarks follow threats by former Deputy President Rigathi Gachagua to lead nationwide protests. Gachagua said demonstrations would begin if police officers linked to an attack at a church in Othaya are not arrested.
Speaking in Nairobi Gachagua gave police until February sixteen to act. He accused the security agencies of shielding officers and warned that public anger would spill into the streets if justice delays continue.
Ruto has repeatedly defended his government record on jobs and social programs. He pointed to youth funding projects training drives and business support rolled out across counties.
The President urged young people to reject violence and judge leaders by results not rhetoric. He said Kenya needs calm unity and hard work to move forward and protect the economy.
Political tensions have been rising as economic pressure grows nationwide. Past protests have led to damage arrests and fear in major towns.
Security agencies remain on standby while leaders trade blame. Many citizens watch closely hoping dialogue will replace confrontation in the coming days.
The debate now centers on accountability policing and leadership responsibility. With memories of past unrest still fresh the stakes remain high.
Both sides face pressure to act wisely as the country balances democracy security and economic survival. Public patience is thinning fast across the nation today now.
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