The Ethics and Anti-Corruption Commission (EACC) has summoned 35 Members of the Narok County Assembly as investigations begin into a chaotic altercation that erupted on the floor of the assembly last month.
The anti-graft agency is probing allegations of unethical conduct involving lawmakers who were reportedly involved in a physical confrontation during a House sitting on May 19.
According to information obtained by Tukio, the commission has already launched investigations into the incident, which disrupted assembly proceedings and raised concerns about conduct among elected leaders.
“The EACC has commenced investigations into allegations of unethical conduct involving Members of the County Assembly of Narok who allegedly engaged in fighting on the floor of the House on 19th May 2026,” a source familiar with the investigations said.
According to docs dated June 2, Narok County Assembly Speaker Davis Solian Dikirr and Clerk Joseph Kasaine Lengeny had a summons. They needed to head to the EACC HQ, Integrity Centre in Nairobi on June 4th. Lengeny was set to be there at 9am, while Dikirr was due later that morning for questioning.
The rest of the MCAs connected to the issue were told to show up starting June 8th. Early clues hint the clash started ’cause folks didn’t see eye to eye on changing assembly leadership.
Word is, a heated session had planned to mull over kicking out Finance CEC David Ole Muntet. He was allegedly abusing taxpayer cash and dragging on dev projects, not to mention his brash attitude on the job.
Everything hit the fan when assembly folk split on whether to push ahead with booting him out. So yeah, tension was off the charts that day.
When the Speaker got up to announce changes in leadership and table the impeachment motion before the vote, things fell apart fast. There was chaos, leading to security personnel stepping in to restore order. They escorted the Speaker out, which really put an end to everything abruptly.
Even after theSpeaker’s removal, supporters of the impeachment motion stated they’d keep pushing for it to be resolved. They urged the Office of the Auditor-General to look into the county’s spending.
Now, with the EACC starting an investigation, people are focused on what the lawmakers did. The thing is, the Commission needs to decide if their behavior broke public official ethics rules.
We can’t forget past assembly scuffles led to MCA suspensions, keeping them from sitting in the House or doing committee stuff. So, based on the EACC findings, those causing trouble this time might face even more repercussions.










