Kimilili MP Didmus Barasa has for the first time recounted how he escaped Parliament after a group of protesters raided the buildings.
The group left a trail of destruction with a section of Parliament Buildings going up in flames.
Speaking during a burial of one of the protesters in Bungoma on Saturday, MP Barasa said he cheated death by a whisker.
"Wale vijana walifika, ile mbio nilikimbia nikama ile ya Omanyala. Kama mbio yangu haingeniokoa, leo tungekua tunazika Willy alafu pia mungekuja kunizika," he said.
Loosely translates to: "When the protesters arrived, I ran like Omanyala for my safety. Were it not for my speed, today we would bury Willy then later you have come for my burial".
Barasa spoke during the burial of Willy Sitati, 22, who was killed in Nairobi during the anti-government protests.
He was a student at a college in Kibera, Nairobi.
Barasa said after the group raided Parliment, he saw a group of youths point at him in an apparent move that he was the target.
"Niliona wakifika mbunge wakisema ndio ule mjumbe wa kofia. Nilikua nyuma lakini nilikimbia nikafika Bunge Towers wa kwanza (I saw them arriving in Parliament and they pointed at me. I was behind but I run so fast that i became first to arrive at Bunge Towers)," he said.
"Niliona kifo kwa kioo inapita tuu. Na walizunguka wakanitafuta (I saw death passing in the mirror)."
On June 25, protesters overpowered anti-riot police, forcefully stormed Parliament and tried to set it ablaze on a day of chaos and bloodletting as anti-tax law demos swept the country.
The surging crowd, mostly youths, surrounded Parliament from nearly all corners and brought down parliamentary gates near the Jomo Kenyatta mausoleum under heavy clouds of tear gas.
Police fired live bullets, killing an unknown number of people as MPs fled the rowdy mobs.
Protesters could be seen lying on Parliament Road, some in a pool of blood, but it was unclear whether they were alive or dead.
The Star was able to count at least three bodies lying on Parliament Road.
The scared MPs hid in the underground tunnel of the newly constructed Bunge Towers as the protesters rampaged through Parliament, breaking windows and insulting the lawmakers as betrayers.
Once inside Parliament, they uprooted the national flag, broke into the Senate and turned everything upside down, taking with them valuables.
They then set a section of Parliament on fire but which was quickly contained.
Once things calmed down, scenes of destruction were all visible, especially in the Senate.